Department of Social Services ordered a second time to improve SNAP

Marie Moyer

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Missouri Department of Social Services has been ordered a second time to improve the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program after receiving complaints of difficulties in booking appointments.

SNAP is a government assistance program that helps low-income families afford groceries.

Court documents reported that around 48% of SNAP applications were rejected after applicants were unable to complete an interview for the program.

The process of getting an interview required interviewees to contact the department by phone. Court documents found that the average wait time for callers was over an hour. The highest reported wait time was over six hours. There were also over 50,000 calls deflected to other channels and over 12,000 calls were disconnected around the 30-minute mark.

Similar complaints were stated in the last lawsuit, filed May 2024. U.S. District Judge Douglas Harpool ordered the department to submit a report of planned changes over the next 30 days, give monthly updates on applications and submit a detailed timeline of plans for the next 90 days.

In the new lawsuit, filed May 2025, Harpool ordered for tighter benchmarks for the department, including reducing the wait time to 20 minutes for 90% of callers and reducing the percentage of SNAP applications that were rejected due to interviews to no more than 20%.

“The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program has failed, and continues to fail, to administer the program so as to provide ‘timely, accurate and fair service to applicants and participants’ as required by federal law,” Harpool said in court documents.

Harpool also ordered immediate changes be made in the next 60 days like adding a new menu option for callers to request a paper application instead of asking an operator. Harpool also said applicants who made an effort to apply—such as by calling multiple times, being on hold for a period of time, or having a scheduled appointment—cannot be denied.

The department has six months to show substantial progress or the court will consider more extensive changes.

ABC 17 News reached out to the Department of Social Services for comment, but did not hear back.

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Two seriously injured in single-vehicle Morgan County crash Saturday

Nia Hinson

MORGAN COUNTY, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man and woman from Stover were seriously injured in a crash in Morgan County Saturday night.

According to a crash report from the Missouri State Highway Patrol, a 33-year-old man from Stover was driving a 2017 Ford Explorer on Route T, South of Campell Drive just after 7 p.m. The vehicle crossed the center of the road– went off the right side– and hit a Chevron sign and tree.

A 20-year-old Stover woman and 33-year-old Stover man who were in the vehicle at the time were seriously injured in the crash. The report says they were taken to Lake Regional Hospital for their injuries.

The driver suffered moderate injuries and was also hospitalized.

According to the report, all three people were wearing seatbelts when the crash occurred.

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Oklahoma man thrown from motorcycle during crash in Gasconade County Saturday

Nia Hinson

GASCONADE COUNTY, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Bison, Oklahoma man was injured after trying to avoid a deer on his motorcycle in Gasconade County Saturday night.

A Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report says it happened around 8:15 p.m, on Route Z, west of Horstmann Road. The 48-year-old man was riding a 2024 Harley Davidson Street Glide when a deer walked onto the road.

The man tried to avoid crashing into the deer by braking and steering around it, the crash report says.

His motorcycle then went off the right side of the road and flipped over, throwing the man from the bike.

He was taken to Mercy Hospital with serious injuries.

The report says he was not wearing a helmet when the crash occurred.

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St. Ann woman injured in Callaway County crash Saturday

Nia Hinson

CALLAWAY COUNTY, Mo. (KMIZ)

A St. Ann woman was seriously injured after her minivan crashed Saturday afternoon.

According to a Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report, the 42-year-old woman was driving a 2009 Toyota Sienna on Interstate 70 at the 144.2 mile marker just after 2 p.m. The crash occurred when the vehicle went off the right side of the road and hit a guardrail.

The woman was taken to University Hospital with serious injuries.

The report states she was not wearing a seatbelt when the crash occurred.

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Four men arrested after series of crimes in Columbia

Euphenie Andre

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Four men are behind bars following a violent and busy week for the Columbia Police Department, which included two standoffs and a shooting.

On Saturday, Columbia Police said 18-year-old Kieran Piersee was arrested in connection with a Friday night shooting on Moss Street in central Columbia.

According to a press release from police, Piersee allegedly shot a 32-year-old man in the leg in the 900 block of Moss Street. Police say the man’s injuries were non-life-threatening.

Piersee was arrested on charges of first-degree assault, armed criminal action, and unlawful use of a weapon. He is currently being held in the Boone County Jail without bond.

Just one day earlier Ramelus Bradel, 19, was charged in Boone County following an alleged domestic incident that led to a heavy police presence at the Forest Village Apartments on Thursday.

According to police, the altercation involved a woman. Bradely is charged with unlawful use of a weapon, third-degree domestic assault, and misdemeanor fourth-degree domestic assault. He is also being held in the Boone County Jail without bond.

The string of crime began Wednesday with a standoff in northeast Columbia. Police arrested 36-year-old Antonio Watson and 38-year-old Rodney L. Hayes II after an hours-long standoff. According to law enforcement, the two men had three felony warrants between them, issued from three different counties.

Watson reportedly failed to register as a sex offender in Randolph County in 2023. Hayes is being held on two no-bond warrants for drug possession, one out of Boone County and another out of Callaway County. He remains in the Boone County Jail without bond.

Watson was not listed on the Boone County Jail roster as of Saturday night. As of Saturday, online court records show that Watson and Hayes had not yet been formally charged in relation to the standoff.

According to online court records, no court hearings have been scheduled yet for Piersee, Bradely, or Hayes.

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Report finds Missouri ranks in top ten states with most off-road vehicle deaths

Marie Moyer

COLUMBIA Mo. (KMIZ)

Since the beginning of May, the Missouri State Highway Patrol reported three utility task vehicle crashes. All three happened in the first weekend of the month.

One crash killed a Westphalia man. Another crash seriously injured a 16-year-old girl from O’Fallon. The most recent incident occurred in Pettis County, resulting in a man and a woman being seriously injured. All three crash reports state that the vehicle was flipped or overturned, and the occupants were not wearing seatbelts.

According to the Consumer Federation of America, Missouri ranked first in the nation for the most UTV and ROV deaths in 2022 and 2023, respectively. Missouri ranked 12th in the nation for the most ATV deaths. The reports also found that, across the board, most incidents were single-vehicle rollover crashes on roads with people not wearing helmets. The most common age of death was under 15 years old.

The CFA also found that in 2022 and 2023, the month with the most crashes involving off-road vehicles was July; however, numbers started picking up in April.

For ATVs, Missouri State Highway Patrol helmets are required for drivers under 18 years old. Show-Me Farm Safety also recommends wearing proper safety gear like gloves, boots and thick layers.

ATVs also require a visible bicycle safety flag, a proper muffler to manage noise and a spark arrester to prevent fires.

A license or permit is required to drive an off-road vehicle on the highway.

When accessing off-road trails at a Missouri State Park, riders are required to buy a permit before driving on the dirt trails.

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‘It could have been worse’: First responders, passenger reflect on Hermann trolley crash

Mitchell Kaminski

GASCONADE COUNTY, Mo. (KMIZ)

Nearly a week after a trolley crash in Hermann injured more than 30 people, local first responders and hospital officials say the outcome could have been far worse without a critical partnership formed in 2022.

On Saturday, May 3, a trolley bus carrying 41 passengers veered off the road, injuring 32 people. According to the Missouri State Highway Patrol, the accident occurred near Eagles Nest Drive at 10:45 a.m. after the driver — a 45-year-old Hermann man — overcorrected after leaving the right side of the road, causing the vehicle to crash into a ditch.

Brook Emshoff was on the trolley celebrating her birthday with a group of friends and described the experience as terrifying. 

“The driver was speeding down those very windy roads. And I remember hearing something hit the gravel and feeling the whole trolley lurch to the side. Then I felt him overcorrect, and all of a sudden we were in the woods,” Emshoff said. “The driver really actually did a good job of putting the trolley where he did.  We didn’t flip. We didn’t end up in the tree. So, the injuries could have been much worse.” 

Four individuals suffered serious injuries, 11 sustained moderate injuries and 17 had minor injuries. All were rescued from the wreckage within 40 minutes of emergency crews arriving.

“It was very quiet on the trolley until people started figuring out they were injured. The shock, I would say there’s maybe five, 10 seconds before everyone started screaming,” Emshoff said. “We had a guy behind me with a dislocated knee, a couple of spinal fractures, pelvic fractures.”

Emshoff said she suffered minor injuries, but went into shock shortly after the crash. 

“I know I spoke to my mom on the phone, but I have no recollection of doing it,” Esmhoff said. “So much thanks to the firemen and the staff at the hospitals, and honestly, all of the people that were that trolley,  we kind of had to take care of each other, become very fast friends.” 

Mike Miller — who has been with the Hermann Area Ambulance District for 15 years — described a swift, and coordinated EMS response involving five ambulances from three districts and a medical helicopter staged at the local hospital.

“We requested local ambulances and then we also requested a helicopter just because we weren’t know what we were going to be getting into that time,” Miller said. “So, we actually had three ambulances staged at the hospital and with the helicopter. And then we had two ambulances from Hermann, an ambulance from Owens, an ambulance from New Haven, [and an] ambulance from Jerrold respond to the scene.”

Miller emphasized the effectiveness of the response, despite the inherent challenges of scenes with a high number of patients.

“The challenge was more just the organization on the scene,” he said. “But due to the timing of ambulances coming in and based on when they got there, we were able to get patients transported out almost in a seamless manner.”

“Any mass casualty like that’s going to be a little bit chaotic at first,” Miller said. “So the biggest thing is: Take a deep breath and this is what you got to work with and move forward with it.”

Hermann Hospital CEO Bill Hellebusch, who was home gardening when he received the call, called the crash response “a really unique situation.”

“This is the kind of thing that every hospital administrator hopes they never get called for,” Hellenbusch told ABC 17 News.  

Hellebusch credited the hospital’s partnership with MU Health Care, formed in November 2022 to staff the emergency department, for helping cut the response-and-treatment time in half.

“We would not have had the same result without MU. I just know that,” Hellebush said. “If we didn’t have the two additional [providers] come, what would have happened is the day would have become a lot longer.”

Hellebusch said the hospital treated more than 20 patients in under four hours and received support from more than 40 people, including volunteers who provided food, water, and family communication assistance.

Michelle Seithel, a physician assistant with MU Health who was dispatched to help, was struck by the outpouring of assistance.

“When I got there and was, you know, trying to figure out who needed to be seen, I had so many people, hospital staff, nurses, asking me, What do I need?” Seithel said.

MU Health Care nurse practitioner Sheila Struckmeyer, who was on the front lines of triage, highlighted the unique challenges rural hospitals face in crises.

“I’ve been involved in mass casualty stuff before. However, typically when you have that, you have quite a few resources readily available,” Struckmeyer said. “This is the first time that I’d had a situation like this at a critical access hospital with limited resources.”

Struckmeyer noted injuries ranged from spinal and pelvic fractures to cuts and bruises.

“My focus was like the sickest of the sick need to be taken care of first,” she said.

While Hellebusch acknowledged there are aspects they would handle differently in the future, he praised the exceptional level of teamwork.

“With the amount of support we have from this community, if you don’t wake up and find it easy to jump out of bed and come do this work, you have got to check yourself to make sure you still have a pulse,” Hellebusch said. “This last Saturday, it was  it was just another shining example of that.”

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Two men arrested in Columbia in connection with nationwide identity theft scheme

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Two men have been arrested and charged in connection with a nationwide forgery and identity theft scheme, according to court documents and a press release from the Columbia Police Department.

Lionel Monsanto, 26, and Salvador Ocasio, 55, were each charged in Boone County with trafficking in stolen identities, identity theft and three counts of forgery. They are both being held at the Boone County Jail without bond.

Casenet lists Columbia as Monsanto’s address, but court documents and jail records indicate his address is in Pennsylvania. Ocasio is from Bronx, New York.

Court documents say that Columbia police were notified on Thursday from a USPS inspector about frauds that occurred at St. Louis-area post offices committed by men driving in a Chevrolet Malibu with Illinois license plates.

The inspector allegedly said that the men were trying to cash fraudulent US Treasury checks, the statement says. A license plate reader on Thursday found the vehicle heading west on Interstate 70 in Callaway County, the statement says.

Court documents say that Ocasio allegedly went to the post office location at the Columbia Mall around 10 a.m. to cash a fraudulent treasury check. The USPS employee allegedly told police that they were also notified about fraud attempts and that employee felt the US Treasury check was fake, the statement says. Ocasio allegedly left in a Chevrolet Malibu.

Columbia police stopped the vehicle on East Nifong Boulevard near State Farm Parkway, the statement says. Monsanto was driving the vehicle and Ocasio was in the passenger seat, the statement says.

Police allegedly found a US Treasury check with the name Flynn Matthews for $1,188.87 along with an ID that had the same name and Ocasio’s photo, court documents say. In the vehicle, police eventually found IDs from 10 different states that included different names – that corresponded with a check – that had Ocasio’s photo, the statement says.

The USPS employed identified Ocasio as the man who walked into the post office with the fake check earlier, court documents say.

Court filings show an initial court appearance was held on Friday. Ocasio’s case shows that he appeared by video from the jail and that a confined docket hearing is scheduled for 1 p.m. Tuesday and a preliminary hearing is set for 9 a.m. Thursday, June 5.

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No injuries reported after gun fired in Boonville

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

No injuries were reported after a gun was fired in Boonville, according to a Friday social media post from the Boonville Police Department.

The post says that police were called to a report of shots fired at 3 p.m. at the intersection of Main Street and Rankin Mill Lane. Police wrote that they found evidence of a gun being fired, but did not say how many shots were likely fired.

Police wrote that the person who allegedly fired the gun drove away in a black Volkswagen with Missouri license plates reading TL6D7P.

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Nearly 6,000 MU students to graduate next weekend

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

There will be 5,954 people graduating during next weekend’s commencement ceremonies at the University of Missouri, according to a Friday press release from MU.

Graduation ceremonies will occur Friday through Sunday and a total of 6,428 degrees will be awarded. Of that total, 4,638 are bachelor’s degrees; 1,101 are master’s and education specialists’ degrees and 689 are doctoral and professional degrees, the release says. Some students receive more than one degree.

The release says that ceremonies will be livestreamed.

The schedule for graduations will be as followed:

Friday, May 16 

Graduate School – Masters and Education Specialist Degrees: 1 p.m. at Mizzou Arena

Honors College: 2 p.m. at Jesse Auditorium

Graduate School – Doctoral Degrees: 4 p.m. at Mizzou Arena

Sinclair School of Nursing: 6 p.m. at Jesse Auditorium

Trulaske College of Business: 7 p.m. at Mizzou Arena

Saturday, May 17

College of Arts & Science (Arts & Science Commencement ceremonies are divided by major, the release says.)

8:30 a.m. at Mizzou Arena includes the following majors: Biological Sciences; Chemistry; Constitutional Democracy; Data Science; Economics; Geological Sciences; History; Mathematics; Physics; Political Science; Psychology/Psychological Sciences; Public Administration & Policy; Sociology; Statistics

Noon at Mizzou Arena includes the following majors: Ancient Mediterranean Studies; Anthropology; Architectural Studies; Art; Art History; Communication; Digital Storytelling; English; Film Studies; General Studies; Geography; German; Graphic Design; Interdisciplinary Studies (includes emphasis areas of Black Studies, Environmental Studies, Peace Studies, and Women’s and Gender Studies); International Studies; Linguistics; Music; Music Education; Philosophy; Religious Studies; Romance Languages (includes emphasis areas of French and Spanish); Russian; Textile and Apparel Management; Theatre

School of Medicine: 11 a.m. at Jesse Auditorium

School of Law: 2 p.m. at Jesse Auditorium

College of Health Sciences: 3:30 p.m. at Mizzou Arena

College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources: 7 p.m. at Mizzou Arena

Sunday, May 18

Missouri School of Journalism: 9 a.m. at Mizzou Arena

College of Engineering: Noon at Mizzou Arena

College of Veterinary Medicine: 1 p.m. at Jesse Auditorium

College of Education & Human Development: 3 p.m. at Mizzou Arena

College of Health Sciences (Professional/Clinical): 4 p.m. at Jesse Auditorium

ROTC Commissioning

Naval/Marine: 2 p.m. at  Stotler Lounge, Memorial Union

Air Force: 11 a.m. Saturday, May 17 at Cornell Hall, Bush Auditorium

Army: 9 a.m. Sunday, May 18 at Memorial Union, Wrench Auditorium

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