Audrain County man charged with nine child sex crimes

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

An Audrain County man has been charged with nine child sex crimes involving two victims.

James Winkler is charged with one count of first-degree attempted rape, one count of first-degree statutory sodomy, one count of incest, five counts of first-degree child molestation and one count of child abuse without sexual contact.

Court documents state Winkler was first accused of trying to have sexual intercourse with victim 1 in 2018. During the investigation, officials learned that siblings of the victim reported physical or sexual abuse by Winkler.

A second victim reported to a school counselor on Aug. 20 about the sexual abuse.

Court documents state the second victim reported three times over the summer Winkler sexually abused them. The child also reported that Winkler had physically abused them by pinching her arm with his fingernails, causing scars.

Investigators said the victim reported Winkler sexually assaulting them every night for two months.

Deputies said while investigating the abuse, Winkler refused to separate from the victim as requested. The deputy wrote Winkler was trying to intimidate the victim by standing in her line of sight, being physically aggressive and making loud negative statements. The child started to shake in fear, according to the deputy, and was put into a law enforcement vehicle to separate her from his behavior.

Documents state Children’s Division records show he was investigated multiple times for allegations, including physical abuse.

Online court records show that a no-bond warrant for his arrest was issued, but has not been served.

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Columbia annouces new Housing and Neighborhood Services director

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Columbia City Manager De’Carlon Seewood has announced his pick to be the next Housing and Neighborhood Services director.

William Rataj will start as the new director on Sept. 29.

Rataj has previously worked as the director of housing with the City of St. Louis Community Development Administration since 2014. He has worked in community development for 29 years, according to the release.

“Rataj’s experience working in housing in Missouri will be beneficial to Columbia as we continue to explore implementing recommendations from our recent housing study, completed in partnership with Boone County,” Seewood said in a release.

Rataj has a bachelor’s degree in political science from the University of Missouri – St. Louis. He is also a certified housing development finance professional.

He was one of three finalists for the role.

A spokesperson for the City Manager’s office told ABC 17 News the previous director, Rebecca Thompson, became the Deputy City Counselor for the city in April.

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Testimony continues in murder trial for Columbia man accused in 2022 fatal shooting

Olivia Hayes

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Testimony continued on Wednesday in the trial of a Columbia man accused of a 2022 deadly shooting.

Isaac J. Bryant is facing charges of second-degree murder and armed criminal action in the death of Demetrius Ware. Multiple witnesses and experts took the stand on Wednesday.

Bryant is accused of shooting Ware, 37, of Columbia, outside of a home in the 800 block of Grand Avenue in May of 2022. Police said Bryant drove by the home and shot Ware. Ware was taken to a hospital, where he was later pronounced dead.

Wednesday’s witness testimony focused heavily on the events following the shooting, with accounts from the coroner who performed Ware’s autopsy, responding officers and another key witness in the case, who testified under immunity from the state.

Carl Stacy, a Forensic Pathologist, said Ware had traces of Methamphetamine, THC and Nicotine present in his system at the time of his death, according to his toxicology report. Stacy’s findings found that Ware had two bullet wounds in his forehead. He said the bullet came in at an angle and that he was shot about two feet away from ware was standing.

Stacy said on the stand that his exam can only tell the direction the bullet came from, not where the shooter shot from or who shot the gun.

The state’s next witnesses were two of the responding Columbia Police Department officers the night of the shooting: Jesse Ritter and Malique Dameron.

Ritter described locating three shell casings at the scene shortly after arriving. Both Ritter and Dameron said that they learned of a suspected car and were told Bryant was a suspect from other officers on scene.

Ritter said he found the car parked shortly after the shooting in the 200 block of Lincoln Dr. He said he called for backup and watched to see if anyone would approach the car. Dameron assisted Ritter with surveillance of the area.

The officers later saw a man and a woman approach the car, which introduces Mark Moore into the timeline. The officers said when they went to approach Moore, he had latex gloves on his hands and appeared to be messing with the blue Chevy Impala. When Moore was being taken into custody, Ritter said he found two more shell casings by the car.

Ritter and Dameron both said they did not read Moore his Miranda rights. Both officers also said they did not see Bryant near the scene or the car the night of the shooting.

Testimony also heard in court details of how they gathered evidence from the blue Impala following Moore’s arrest and how they say it tied Bryant to the shooting. Danielle Clifton, a Crime Scene Investigator for the Columbia Police Department, testified that car and court documents with Isaac Bryant’s name were found in the trunk of the car.

John Voss, the lead detective on the case but now retired, also took the stand and detailed phone data tied to Bryant’s phone number that he said placed him on or near Grand Ave. at the time Ware was shot and on or near Lincoln Dr. shortly after the shooting took place. However, Voss said Bryant’s phone itself was not ever recovered by police.

Voss said the data can’t confirm who had possession of the phone or who was using it. However, the number was registered to Bryant through T-Mobile records.

Moore was introduced as a key witness to testify under immunity from the state. Before he was put on the stand, Bryant’s team objected to Moore testifying. They said his deposition was based heavily on hearsay and cited a note from his attorney that he was not competent to testify, but no previous ruling was delivered by a judge regarding Moore’s competence.

Moore’s attorney also expressed concern about him being vulnerable to federal prosecution. However, Judge Jacobs allowed testimony to move forward and Moore to take the stand.

Moore testified that he was friends with Bryant and had spoken with him on the phone the day leading up to the shooting. He said Bryant asked him for a ride, but he could not pick him up. After the call, he said he later saw Bryant walking on Oak Street and stopped briefly to talk to him.

The defense later explained in their questioning of Moore that Bryant was walking to his cousin’s house, who is also a mother figure, when Moore saw him walking. Moore said Bryant seemed normal when he saw him in person.

He said that later that night, after Ware had been shot in the early morning hours of May 8, 2022, when he arrived at the blue Impala, that he was there to help a woman who had called him to help her pick up a car.

Moore said he did not know what he was being arrested for that night and did not remember getting told his rights. He also said that in his police interview, he was not aware he could have an attorney present with him and that he said what he said in his initial interview so he could leave, but maintains that he feels like he was truthful.

Adam O’Dell, a Columbia Police Detective, took the stand. He conducted the interview of Moore. O’Dell mirandized Moore before the interview began and also obtained Moore’s phone during.

Moore explained that he was put in a holding cell for hours after his arrest and was questioned after he fell asleep in the holding cell. Moore identified Bryant to the police in his interview through a photo, and that he got the keys to the blue Impala from Bryant when he had seen him on the street earlier that day.

However, in his deposition later to the defense, he said that the woman had the car keys when she picked him up that night. Moore also said on the stand that he believes his deposition reflected a more accurate account of his memory of the events that night.

Moore also revealed he cannot read or write, but was asked in his interrogation by officers to identify street names, told the street names by officers and that the officers marked important locations to the case for him instead of himself.

During O’Dell’s testimony, a video of his interview with Moore was played, showing O’Dell presenting Moore with the map and helping him figure out where to mark down the location he saw Bryant. Moore did not read off the streets by names, but instead is seen on the video walking Detective O’Dell through turns he would take to get around in the area.

The defense suggested O’Dell telling Moore the streets in the area could be seen as coaching, but O’Dell said that the directions he gave Moore were to help give him an idea of where the map covered. O’Dell also testified that he was not aware that Moore could not read or write.

Moore said he did not know Ware had been shot at the time of his arrest and that he did not see Bryant driving the car, did not see Bryant near Grand Ave. and did not see Bryant holding a gun the night of or the day leading up to the shooting. O’Dell testified that Moore communicated with Bryant through multiple phone calls on May 8th after the shooting on Grand Ave. had been reported.

The trial is expected to go the rest of the week.

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Some Moberly customers to be impacted by scheduled water service outage

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Water service will be interrupted on Thursday in Moberly as crews replace a water main pipe segment and valve on the 100 block of Bedford.

Moberly said in a release that customers affected in the area include 100, 200 and 300 blocks of Bedford Street, 700 block of Sampson and the 200 block of Hedges Street.

Water service will be restored once repairs are done in the evening.

Road access will be restricted starting Wednesday to Bedford and one lane of Sampson Street through Thursday.

The release states that if residents experience low water pressure or have no water, then a 48-hour boil advisory will be issued.

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Student organization files lawsuit against University of Missouri President

Jazsmin Halliburton

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

An organization will be announcing a lawsuit against University of Missouri President Mun Choi over the removal of Mizzou Students for Justice in Palestine from last year’s homecoming parade.

The Council of American-Islamic Relations will be announcing the lawsuit in a press conference at 1 p.m. Wednesday on the corner of Elm Street and South Ninth Street in downtown Columbia.

The CAIR is the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization and will be holding Wednesday’s press conference after Mizzou Students for Justice in Palestine was barred from participating in the 2024 Mizzou homecoming parade.

CAIR also successfully sued the University of Maryland in early August after the school prevented UMD SJP from hosting a vigil for Palestinians who died in Gaza. The school settled with UMD SJP for $100K.

According to court documents, MJSP’s application to join MU’s Homecoming parade was approved by both the 2024 Parade Committee and the Mizzou Alumni Association. For their float, the group planned to show Palestinian culture through a traditional dance and by passing out Palestinian candy to the crowd. They also planned to have two banners that said “Ceasefire Now” and “Stop the Genocide.”

MSJP v ChoiDownload

The MSJP was then asked to meet with University of Missouri officials to explain their plans for the float. Members of the meeting included Michelle Froese, the then Interim Dean of Students, representing University Chancellor Dr. Mun Choi. MSJP claims the university did not schedule similar meetings with other student groups.

“A University of Missouri official told MSJP leadership that its application would be subjected to a unique review process. Unlike every other student organization, Chancellor Choi had the final say on whether MSJP would be allowed to participate in the Homecoming Parade,” according to court documents.

Three days before the parade, Choi emailed the group notifying them that he personally denied their application. In the email, Choi mentioned the behavior of students at other universities.

“Chancellor Choi further states in the email that he made this decision based on ‘[a] review of SJP events around the country’ and ‘[e]nsuring the safety of members of the MSJP and homecoming participants and spectators,'” according to court documents.

“They reviewed SJP events around the nation and found significant disturbances and violence, which we reject and believe is irrelevant reasoning because we have no affiliation to any sort of national organization,” former MSJP President Isleen Atallah said.

The documents allege that several political and cultural organizations later participated in the parade, including local candidates running for office, Mid-Missouri Pride Fest and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America. Two unnamed MU fraternity and sorority floats also allegedly promoted President Donald Trump’s candidacy.

The CAIR and Mizzou SJP are announcing the lawsuit, which alleges that Choi’s decision to exclude them from the parade violates the First Amendment.

“The homecoming parade was a forum that was open to not only students, but community organizations and specifically political organizations so that they could join and express their messages,” Ahmad Kaki, staff attorney at CAIR said. “When President Choi personally denied the Students for Justice for Palestine from being able to participate in the parade, they engaged in viewpoint discrimination by saying we’re allowed some viewpoints and some messages to be expressed and not others.”

“Chancellor Choi’s safety concerns were pretextual; he had no specific information that MSJP’s participation posed a safety risk to anyone and instead sought to exclude MSJP because he opposed the view they expressed,” according to court documents.

In a statement from University of Missouri spokesperson Christopher Ave, he said that the University’s decision to bar MSJP from the parade was made to ensure safety during the parade.

“The university will defend its decision in any lawsuit that is filed. Ensuring a safe environment for our campus community is a top priority,” Ave said. “Significant disturbances had occurred across the country at other campus events involving Students for Justice in Palestine groups that helped in informing our decision.”

The statement also adds that a senior leader from MSJP was showing “concerning actions” on campus around Homecoming last year and was trespassed on campus for verbal abuse and stalking following Homecoming.

CAIR told ABC 17 News the lawsuit is straightforward. If they win the case, CAIR is looking for confirmation from the courts that the University’s actions were unconstitutional, compensation for the money spent by MSJP preparing for the parade and to allow MSJP into the 2025 homecoming parade.

“We think it’s very obvious that the president engages in viewpoint discrimination and violated the First Amendment by denying the students free speech rights and their ability to protest in their own country,” Kaki said.

The MJSP has applied to participate in the 2025 homecoming parade with the same plans as last year. Student organization float applications close on Wednesday at 11:59 p.m.

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QUESTION OF THE DAY: What’s your take on the Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce engagement?

Matthew Sanders

Whether you love them, can’t stand them, or just don’t care, you have to admit that Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift’s love story is a pop culture phenomenon.

The pop star and the Kansas City Chiefs’ star tight end announced Tuesday that they’re engaged to be married. It’s part of a whirlwind romance between two of the most recognizable people in the country.

So what’s your take on the big engagement? Let us know by voting in the poll.

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St. Louis man sentenced to probation after starting fire

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A St. Louis man charged after he set a Helitech trailer on fire in Callaway County in May 2024 was sentenced on Monday.

Josef Black pleaded guilty to one count of knowingly burning or exploding and two counts of first-degree property damage. Prosecutors dropped a misdemeanor charge of first-degree trespassing as part of an agreement.

Online court records state his sentence was suspended and Black was given five years of supervised probation with special conditions to get a substance abuse and mental health evaluation done, five days of shock treatment at the Callaway County jail and pay restitution of $10,075 to the defendant.

If Black fails to meet these conditions, he will spend four years in the Department of Corrections, according to online records.

By pleading guilty, Black admitted to throwing gravel at cars at Helitech and breaking windows, along with pouring gasoline to set the trailer on fire. He also suffered burns on his body after the fire.

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High Street viaduct renovations put on pause as costs rise

Marie Moyer

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

Jefferson City and Cole County Public Works are looking for sponsors to foot an around $18 million renovation bill for the city’s High Street viaduct.

The updated estimate that was announced Tuesday morning during a Cole County Commission meeting is around $6 million more than what was expected in November 2023.

In 2023, Jefferson City Public Works proposed several renovation ideas, including plans to shorten the road and move the creek underneath the viaduct. The accepted plan was to shorten the road and connect it with Missouri Boulevard.

Courtesy: Cole County Commission

According to Jefferson City Council members Derek Thomas of Ward 3 and Julie Allen of Ward 4, the council is conscious of the viaduct’s deteriorating condition; however, they are currently prioritizing different Capitol Improvement projects.

“Is it at crisis emergency level? I don’t believe so,” Thomas said. “There are other issues that I think are crying for dollars way more expediently, the tri-level crossing for one, the Jefferson City Police building is in pitiful shape, there’s other capital projects that I think deserve priority.”

“What the city has been focusing on is working on their ten-year planning for capital projects and the improvements that are necessary,” Allen said. “That’s really what’s going to come next for us as far as the larger picture.”

During Tuesday’s meeting, the Cole County Commission voted to renew the current Capitol Improvement Sales Tax rate, which will be on the 2026 ballot for voter approval.

No official sponsors or grants for the High Street viaduct have been presented to the Cole County Commission or the Jefferson City Council.

ABC 17 News reached out to Jefferson City Public Works for comment but did not hear back.

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Columbia man sentenced to ten years for domestic assault

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Columbia man was sentenced on Monday after police found shell casings outside a home earlier this year.

Clyde J. Johnson Jr., 50, was sentenced to 10 years in the Department of Corrections after changing his plea on Monday in court.

Online court records state prosecutors dropped three felonies against Johnson as part of a plea agreement.

Johnson was sentenced to seven years for second-degree domestic assault, four years for unlawful use of a weapon and 10 years for two counts of unlawful possession of a firearm. All of the charges will run concurrently with each other.

Prosecutors dropped the charges of first-degree kidnapping and two counts of armed criminal action.

Johnson was arrested after a shots-fired call in the 4200 block of Rice Road. Prosecutors charged him after police found shell casings outside a home in March, according to a probable cause statement.

Police found a handgun with no serial number hidden in Johnson’s home, the statement says.

Prosecutors also charged Johnson with a string of incidents that began Feb. 23. The victim told police that Johnson had been acting paranoid and violent and had been carrying a gun, the statement says. The victim said Johnson burned and hit her during the incidents and barred her from leaving the residence, according to the statement.

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Trial starts for Columbia man accused in 2022 deadly shooting

Olivia Hayes

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The first witness in the jury trial for a deadly 2022 Columbia shooting took the stand on Tuesday.

The trial for Isaac J. Bryant started on Tuesday morning. Bryant is facing charges of second-degree murder and armed criminal action in the death of Demetrius Ware.

Eight women and six men were selected for the jury and heard opening statements by the defense and the state.

Bryant is accused of shooting Ware, 37, of Columbia, outside of a home in the 800 block of Grand Avenue in May of 2022. Police said Bryant drove by the home and shot Ware. Ware was taken to a hospital, where he was later pronounced dead.

Prosecutors called the shooting a case of jealousy and said in their opening that they would prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Bryant was guilty using eye-witness accounts, testimony from responding law enforcement and phone records.

They said Bryant’s phone records would show him on Grand Ave. the night of the shooting and at various other locations connected with the case following the shooting. Prosecutors also explained that they plan to show the link between the gun used in the murder and Bryant.

The defense said that the state’s eyewitness gave inconsistent accounts of the night of the shooting and that she initially told the police she did not know what happened. Bryant’s defense said they will prove that no scientific evidence places the gun in Bryant’s hand.

His lawyers also plan to use surveillance footage from nearby to weaken the eyewitness’ identification of Bryant. They say it’s not possible to identify the driver of the car, nor is it able to confirm the car, leading them to pose the question of ‘how could the witness be able to from his rearview mirror?’

Bryant’s defense claimed that the phone data the state is referencing is not reliable and said police narrowed their investigation to focus only on Bryant once they named him as a suspect.

Two witnesses also took the stand Tuesday, including one of the first responding officers on scene that night and Quirteasha Brown-Wells, the state’s eyewitness.

Brown-Wells said she and Bryant went out for a few months and planned to see Bryant the day of the shooting, but she claimed she had no relationship with him on or around the day of the shooting.

Brown-Wells said while on the stand that Bryant was returning keys to her, but was not allowed in the house. She explained this was because she shares a child with Ware and he did not want Bryant around them. She also said she was not in a romantic relationship with either of the men at the time of the shooting.

Brown-Wells said she was in her kitchen when she first heard the gunshots, but didn’t think anything of them because it was common in the area. Ware had just left the home about two minutes later when she said she found Ware in the road, shot.

Brown-Wells explained that she identified Bryant in his rearview mirror after seeing him for about two seconds. She added that she knew it was him because he was supposed to be picking her up.

The courtroom started to heat up during the defense’s turn to question Brown-Wells. Bryant’s Lawyers referenced a deposition she gave to them on Sept. 28, 2022, about four months after the shooting.

In that deposition transcript, Brown-Wells was quoted as saying she was sexually active with Bryant at the time of the shooting and that they had seen each other almost every day of the week leading up to the shooting. She claimed on the stand that she was referring to Ware, but the defense specified Bryant in its question in the transcript.

She also said she did not know she was coming to the defense office to give a deposition. Brown-Wells was subpoenaed for that deposition and sworn under oath at the time. She also said on the stand that she did not have any memory of giving her deposition.

The trial is expected to go through the end of the week, with it set to resume on Wednesday morning.

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