Registered sex offender will serve life in prison for Platte County crimes

Crystal Olney

PLATTE COUNTY, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Terry Lee Wilson, a registered sex offender, was sentenced Wednesday to life in prison for sexually abusing a young girl for over a decade.

Wilson was found guilty in February by a Platte County jury of three counts of first degree statutory sodomy.

“This defendant repeatedly committed serious sexual offenses, causing significant harm to numerous victims,” Platte County Prosecuting Attorney Eric Zahnd said in a press release. “It is both just and necessary that he now will serve multiple life sentences, ensuring he can no longer endanger another young woman.”

He was previously convicted in 2003 out of Wyandotte County on multiple counts of felony attempted indecent liberties with a child and received probation.

When the crimes in Platte County occurred, Wilson was a registered sex offender.

The victim in the Platte County case testified that the sexual abuse increased over a number of years and she eventually contacted the Metropolitan Organization to County Sexual Assault to report the abuse, according to a press release.

Since Wilson was charged as a predatory sexual offender, the minimum sentence was life in prison. The sentence he received on Wednesday was three terms of life imprisonment.

“I am very proud of this young girl for coming forward, ultimately leading to a dangerous man now spending the rest of his life in prison. We will continue to do all we can in Platte County to rid our streets of sexual predators,†said Zahnd in a press release.

The Kansas City Police Department investigated the case.

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As sewer hike looms, St. Joseph re-envisions long-term plan to address mandates

Cameron Montemayor

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Over the last 25 years, St. Joseph sewer rates have risen by more than 400%, a significant increase fueled by more than half a billion dollars in mandated improvements to address regulations and prevent sewage overflows into the Missouri River.

From around $13 a month in 2000, the average sewer bill now sits at $65.70 for an in-city resident in 2025. On Monday, City Councilmembers will vote on a proposal to raise rates by 3% in both 2025 and 2026, with the first increase taking effect July 1 if approved.

Local parents Marc and Stephany Carpenter often pay a sewer bill more than twice the average. The longtime Lake Contrary residents see a higher rate due to their home falling outside city limits but still being connected to the city’s sewer system, as is the case with many residents surrounding St. Joseph.

“It’s always been about $100 to $150 on the sewer bill,” Marc said.

With five kids at home to care for, the Carpenters lament how much sewer costs have grown over time. The family’s challenges are compounded by large increases for almost every major utility this year, including water (17% monthly increase), electricity (7% monthly increase) and proposed increases for natural gas.

“Having five kids, it puts a toll on us,” Stephany said. “Instead of using the money for the kids, I put it on an extra bill.”

If new sewer rates are approved, residents would see back-to-back years of increases after six years without one between 2017 and 2023. A previous council voted to use roughly $5 million in American Rescue Plan Act funding to keep sewer bills stable for several years, a short-term fix.

City, regulators create retooled plan

After more than 15 years and roughly $250 million spent on a wide range of critical projects to address sewer overflows and federal water regulations in phase one, city leaders are ready to move on a re-envisioned phase two plan that guides the next 20 to 30 years of infrastructure improvement projects for the Water Protection Facility, sewer overflow controls and new technologies for the pre-treatment process.

But unlike previous requirements that came with challenging schedules that often created significant cost concerns for the city and its customers, particularly lower-income households, the new Water Quality Integrated Plan (IP) strikes a stronger balance between prioritizing new investments for sewer and water quality requirements and long-term financial constraints on customers.

“It takes all of those into account and sequences out the projects in a way that allows us to not have debt weighing us down to the point we have to continually raise rates,” said Eddie Leaverton, superintendent of water protection. “There is significant rate savings over the next two to three decades due to the change in this plan.”

One of the IP’s key provisions is a longer project timeline that extends to 2050, versus the previous date of 2035, which likely would have caused the average residential sewer bill to jump to more than $120 a month in the next 10 years.

Sewer bills are now expected to average around $80 a month by 2035 under the new plan. A longer timeline also buys time for bonds from previous sewer projects like the $48 million Blacksnake Creek Project to mature, creating more financial flexibility for future projects instead of stacking debt.

Other Midwest river cities like Omaha, Nebraska ($60.12 a month) and Kansas City, Missouri ($79.01) both have comparable sewer rates to St. Joseph.

“Kansas City and Omaha. They’re going through the same struggle as the city of St. Joseph community is with their sewer rates,” Leaverton said.

Integrated Planning was approved by Congress in 2018 through the bipartisan Water Infrastructure Improvement Act to assist municipalities with regulatory challenges. In 2023, the city retained HDR Engineering, Inc., to assist in developing the IP, an 18-month process that required extensive coordination with the Missouri Department of Natural Resources and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The city has received an initial letter from the Missouri DNR approving the plan. Leaverton said he expects to have a five-year schedule for the first round of projects finalized by the end of the summer.

“What we’ve been doing is evaluating our system and our collection system and our treatment plant, looking at projects completed … What is still left to be done to meet the regulatory requirement?” he said.

Key progress to date: an aging system and sewer overflows

One of the root causes of the city’s dramatic rise in sewer rates lies with its 415-mile-long combined sewer system, 60% of which was built pre-1920.

Combined sewers are a commonly used system where sewage as well as stormwater are both captured in the same system and directed to the Water Protection Facility off Stockyards Expressway, which treats and safely discharges it into the river.

For years, storms and heavy rain events would overwhelm sewers and collection spots, resulting in overflows of untreated wastewater into the Missouri River. Untreated wastewater can contain contaminants, including microbial pathogens, suspended solids and chemicals, creating public health and environmental hazards.

“The EPA and DNR stepped in and said you have to do something to rectify this … due to the fact that we are violating the Clean Water Act with our combined sewer overflows,” Leaverton said. “The city has completed phase one of that.”

Two of the largest projects to date worth an estimated $60 million, the Blacksnake Creek and Whitehead Creek separation projects, required the construction of massive stormwater pipes to intercept water from flood-prone creeks and direct it to the Missouri River.

The Blacksnake Creek project in 2018 saw a massive 300-foot excavating machine cut a 6,700-foot-long pipe deep underground, a multi-year process that finished in 2022, taking considerable pressure off the treatment facility and sewer system.

“That separated out millions of gallons per day that came to the plant, whether it was raining or not,” Leaverton said. “Those separation projects were big.”

Construction of a new $26 million Candy Creek Pump Station by Riverside and Pickett roads was key in replacing a smaller and outdated facility that was struggling to service the growing east side of town.

The city also made sizable improvements to large retention ponds like Corby Pond. Along with being a popular recreation spot, the pond is also designed to hold water during rain events and slowly release it to the plant over time, reducing pressure on the entire system.

A key project carried out at the Water Protection Facility in 2016 was the Ammonia Removal Improvements project, a $50 million effort that upgrade the treatment process by adding a BioSolids dryer facility, grit facility and replacing aging headworks.

“All those projects were important, but we would like to be able to prioritize what those projects are,” said Abe Forney, director of St. Joseph Public Works and Transportation. “We can’t have these massive projects all pile up in the same couple of years.”

Integrated plan lays out a wide range of new projects

The city has aggressively pursued grants as well as state and federal funding sources to try and reduce costs and the impact on ratepayers, including using millions in ARPA funds and $7 million from the Water Resources Development Act spearheaded by Congressman Sam Graves in 2022.

“We run down every avenue that we can to try to save money at any place that we can. We live in this city. You know, we pay the sewer bill that everybody else pays,” Leaverton said.

In April, Councilmembers unanimously approved an ordinance to accept a $2.1 million grant from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for the blower replacement project at the Water Protection Facility, a critical device that pumps air into water to boost its oxygen content.

He said one of the IP’s biggest enhancements is an additional $26 million re-allocated for sanitary sewer rehabilitation work, called cured-in-place pipe lining, a modern and less invasive method of rebuilding aging sewer pipes.

“It’s almost like a new pipe inside of the old pipe. It’s a structural apparatus that just basically makes a new pipe, but it’s just inside of the old infrastructure,” Leaverton said. “We spend around $2 million to $2.5 million every year doing that. The integrated plan is going to step that up.”

The largest project on the horizon involves upsizing the Whitehead Pump Station and implementation of a high-rate treatment facility at the Water Protection Facility, a 20-acre site, allowing them to rapidly treat more water that comes in during rain events.

One of the first key efforts though carrying out the first hydraulic study in 12 years, which will help provide a thorough and updated picture of how captured storm and wastewater travels throughout the city, which has changed with new development occurring on the east and north sides.

“It’s going to be a completely redone citywide hydraulic model. That will allow us to target the projects in a sequential order to do the biggest gains first,” Leaverton said. “And then we’ll start more on the ground construction work.”

Inflation has also had a significant impact on the cost of required projects and the need to create more flexible timelines, which will prove to be critical with new regulations on the horizon in 2030 on how much phosphorus can be discharged in treated water.

“That ten-year gap. You know, that’s a pretty big jump typically. But then after 2020 and COVID and all the supply chain issues and all the inflation, above what would be normal, it really did put pressure on those projects,” Leaverton said.

Wastewater is treated through an extensive process at the Water Protection Facility before being safely transported to the Missouri River. Cameron Montemayor | News-Press NOW

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Family of woman killed in Chiefs rally shooting sues city, gun sellers and others

Associated Press

By: Robert A. Cronkleton

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City stations are reporting that the family of Lisa Lopez-Galvan has sued Kansas City and other defendants, including event organizers and gun sellers, over the mass shooting at the mass shooting at the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl rally, calling her death a “preventable tragedy.â€

Lopez-Galvin, along with her husband, Michael Galvan, and their children, Marc and Andriana Lopez-Galvan, traveled to downtown Kansas City to celebrate the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory on February 14, 2024.

They gathered with thousands of other Chiefs fans, as they crowded in the area surrounding Union Station to watch and listen as the Chiefs players celebrated.

A flurry of gunfire erupted at the end of the rally, striking around 24 people, including Lopez-Galvin and her son. Lopez-Galvin, a 43-year-old mother and beloved local party DJ, died in the shooting.

“This was a preventable tragedy,†the family contends in the lawsuit, filed Wednesday evening in Jackson County Circuit Court.

“Gun sellers ignored their responsibilities under the law. Premises owners and event planners turned a blind eye to foreseeable risks of violence,†the lawsuit said. “And young men armed with pistols and rifles turned a mass gathering into a mass shooting. Each defendant played a part in this tragedy. So each must be held accountable.â€

©2025 The Kansas City Star. Visit kansascity.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

This article was written by the Kansas City Star and picked up by the Associated Press.

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Local auto shop celebrating 30 years of business

News-Press NOW

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The St. Joseph Chamber of Commerce will help Kruse’s Auto Center celebrate its 30th Anniversary.

A ribbon-cutting ceremony will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, June 20 at 9041 N. 4th St.

Kruse’s Auto Center has offered reliable auto repair services, including: brakes, tires, oil changes and more.

For more information, call (816) 364-5939 or visit their website at www.krusesauto.com.

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Sports Commission announces new volleyball tournament for this August

Jacob Meikel

A new high school girls volleyball event is coming to the Civic Arena, a venue where teams invited could find themselves hoisting a state championship trophy not long after.

On Wednesday, the St. Joseph Sports Commission announced the dates for the Inaugural Pony Express Girls State High School Volleyball Tournament at the Civic Arena beginning Aug. 29 and ending Aug. 30. The Civic Arena will be the home of the Missouri State High School Activities Association girls high school volleyball state championships for the upcoming season, and 16 schools invited to this new tournament this August will get a taste of what the venue has to offer for the sport of high school girls volleyball.

Teams from St Joseph and the surrounding area invited as part of the 16-team field were Mid-Buchanan, Bishop LeBlond, Savannah, Central, Plattsburg and Maryville. In a release from the St. Joseph Sports Commission, the Civic will be separated into three courts for the two-day event with 32 games expected to be played in total. 

“We are honored and extremely excited to get the opportunity to host the MSHSAA Girls Volleyball State Championship this coming November and in our continuing effort to create/attract events that fill fit and niche locally but also can engage participants, regionally, statewide and nationally, the creation of this event was an obvious fit and we are excited to see some high level volleyball the first weekend of the season in downtown St. Joseph,†Brett Esely, Executive Director of the St. Joseph Sports Commission said in a release Wednesday.

Different levels of success from last season will enter the Civic Arena for the tournament, including three state semifinal teams and six district champions from 2024. 

St. Pius Festus and Bishop LeBlond will enter as the only teams that have appeared consecutively in the state semifinals of their respective classes over the last two seasons. St. Pius Festus was the Class 4 state champion in 2024.

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Mosaic Life Care Auxiliary to host Alzheimer’s and Dementia Event

News-Press NOW

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The Mosaic Life Care Auxiliary is hosting an event to help better the understanding of Alzheimer’s and Dementia.

The event, in conjunction with Inclusive Wellness Initiative, will be held from 9 a.m. to noon on Monday, June 23, at emPowerU, located at 518 S. 6th St.

Anyone interested in learning more about Alzheimer’s disease, whether you have a personal connection or simply wish to be better informed, is welcome to attend.

“This is vital information to help educate us on how to watch for signs,” said July Vaughn, the representative for the Auxiliary’s Missouri Association of Hospital Auxiliary’s District One. “There is too much underreporting. The more information we can share is good for everyone.”

Brenda Grerr, the program director of the Alzheimer’s Association, Heart of America Chapter and William Beachum III with Mosaic Life Care, will both present information at the event.

Topics will include basic information about causes of Alzheimer’s disease, common misconceptions about the condition, support resources for caregivers, what to expect at appointments and potential ways to minimize risk factors.

The event is free, although organizers request that those interested register, as space is limited.

Registration can be found at mlcfoundation.com/understanding-alzheimers. For more information, call Christina Lund, the Mosiac Life Care Foundation Director of Regional Relations, at (816) 271-7180.

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Trooper suffers minor injuries after getting shot in Saline County; MSHP investigating officer-involved shooting

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Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Missouri State Highway Patrol Troop A announced in a Tuesday evening social media post that the MSHP Division of Drug and Crime Control is investigating an officer-involved shooting in Saline County.

The trooper was taken to an area hospital with minor injuries and has since been released.

According to a MSHP press release, just after 6:15 p.m., troopers were notified that the Concordia Police Department was pursuing a motorcycle driven by a suspect wanted for an out-of-state homicide.

Officers lost sight of the suspect, but just before 8 p.m., Highway Patrol troopers in the area saw the suspect on 115th Rd. heading toward Belmont Ave.

The suspect crashed the motorcycle into a trooper’s patrol car near the intersection of 115th Rd. and Belmont Ave., running away on foot.

The trooper ran after the suspect, who was armed with a handgun. The suspect shot at the trooper, hitting the trooper’s bullet-resistant vest.

The trooper returned fire, shooting the suspect. The suspect was pronounced dead at the scene.

The names of the troopers and the suspect involved were not immediately available.

The reports from the investigation will be forwarded to the Saline County prosecutors.

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‘Dump the Pump’ day encourages residents to use public transportation

Patrick Holleron

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Throughout the day on Thursday, St. Joseph Transit offered free rides on all buses as part of the ‘Dump the Pump’ day initiative.

The day is geared towards encouraging drivers to save financial and fuel-based resources by riding the bus.

“I find it really convenient because today I couldn’t find a ride to my doctor’s (appointment),” said Savion Bernard, a local bus rider. “I couldn’t find a ride to my doctor’s appointment today (Thursday), so I just called the bus (metro service). They said I couldn’t call for a deviation, but I could just go to the bus stop and they’d give me a ride.”

Last week, the City of St. Joseph temporarily moved Go St. Joe to fixed routes only, meaning there will be no deviations from routes for pickups.

According to data from the American Public Transportation Association (APTA), the prices of new cars have increased by 30% since 2019, while used car prices have risen by 40%.

In 2023, gas prices also saw a spike of 25%, which was largely due to oil supply constraints, China’s economic rebound, and the Ukraine war.

For a list of bus routes, visit the city’s website at stjosephmo.gov.

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Camp Geiger debuts all-new invention scouts program, one of the first in the nation

Cameron Montemayor

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Scouts from St. Joseph and more than a dozen states became some of the first in the nation to participate in an all-new STEM-based invention program launched in St. Joseph.

Every summer, scouts from 15 different states call Camp Geiger “home” for multi-week scouting sessions that last from June to July, a near century-long tradition.

The camp is located just north of St. Joseph off Interstate 229 and next to the Missouri River.

This summer, scouts are getting the chance to develop and grow their skills as innovators, part of the first ever Invention Scouts Program launched by the local Pony Express Council thanks to a $30,000 donation from former Camp Geiger scout and now nuclear physicist Rob Duncan, a leading Texas Tech physics professor with more than 50 patents to his name.

“This makes us only the second program in the country like this. And what an exciting opportunity for these scouts to really be the first generation to experience it,” said Dr. Ryan Maderak, director of Benedictine College’s astronomy major and a top advisor for Invention Scouts. “It’s not changing scouting. It’s just enhancing it.â€

Scouts have been working hands on with a wide range of new technology like 3D modeling software, printers, laser cutters, and other equipment.

One competitive project saw scouts design and then build bridges using 3D modeling software. Bridges were then stress-tested against other designs. One of the top-ranked bridges held upwards of 100 pounds, a notable achievement.

“I think the really fantastic part about it is it’s giving a new spin to scouting as a whole,” said Maven Vette, an Eagle Scout and sophomore at Missouri S&T who’s helping teach the new class. “Having this program is giving camp an opportunity to adapt to the growing world.”

Another new-age project involves learning to fly and maneuver drones, which are now used in a variety of industries including agriculture, construction and engineering.

Vette envisions a wide range of new merit badges becoming available thanks to the new program, creating new benchmarks for growth and achievement in the world of science.

“If they get the perspective of I can design things myself, I can problem solve myself, I can make things myself, then that everyday experience will just further influence how they think and I think that’s a big perspective change in their lives,” said Vette, who’s pursuing a mechanical engineering major with a minor in Biomedical Engineering.

One eager scout in attendance for the debut program was 16-year-old Sean Hidy with Troop 60 out of Savannah, Missouri.

“I thought it was pretty cool,” said Hidy. (It’ll) teach me how to do it in the future, too, if I want to continue.”

Over the last several months, Duncan, Maderak and longtime Pony Express Council members Bill McMurray and Ed Stroud have worked to bring the program to life.

Maderak and others see it as a huge opportunity to expand upon the well-known and foundational components of Scouting like camping, cooking, nature study, swimming and hiking, among others. Camp Geiger has already been incorporating areas of focus like electricity, plumbing, welding and hydraulics over the years.

“I got my start teaching astronomy out here at Scout camp … To see it all come together is amazing,” said Maderak. “Connecting with these kids and giving them the spark has always been a big part of what motivates me in my career. That light bulb that goes off. We want to open up the possibilities for these kids.â€

Once camp concludes, the hope now is that scouts take those newfound skills and apply them to everyday life, whether as a hobby or as a potential career.

Maderak wants to ensure scouts have that opportunity by offering similar programs year-round, starting with a 21st Century Scouting Academy at Benedictine College on Saturday, Oct. 4.

“We’ll be offering a full slate of STEM-focused merit badges to continue to build on this enthusiasm and give those kids some, some opportunities to get instruction from experts in their field,” Maderak said. “Our faculty will be teaching and are very enthusiastic about this.”

Information for 21st Century Scouting will be published on the Pony Express Council’s website by the first week of July. A full schedule and registration will also open by the first week of August.

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Woman seriously injured in two-vehicle collision

News-Press NOW

CALDWELL COUNTY, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A 24-year-old Cameron, Missouri, woman was injured following a crash Wednesday afternoon, two miles east of Cameron.

The crash occurred around 1:55 p.m. Wednesday as a 73-year-old King City, Missouri, man was southbound on Northwest Sale Barn Road and collided with a vehicle driven by the Cameron woman, who was traveling west on Northwest Barwick Drive.

The King City man, who was driving a semi-truck, yielded for another vehicle that was stopped in the road. Once he continued into the intersection, he hit the passenger side of the Cameron driver’s vehicle, according to a Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report.

Both of the vehicles involved in the crash came to rest on their wheels.

The 24-year-old woman was transported to Cameron Regional Medical Center for serious injuries, it is unknown if she was utilizing a safety device.

The King City man was not injured and he was wearing a seat belt, according to the crash report.

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