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A detective sabotaged his own cases because he didnā€™t like Kim Gardner. No one stopped him

7 months ago
Across the U.S., reform-minded prosecutors have faced pushback from police departments. In St. Louis, issues around police accountability and racial bias were thrown in sharp relief after Michael Brown, Jr. was shot and killed by a Ferguson police officer in 2014. ProPublica reporter Jeremy Kohler is co-writer of the new piece, ā€œA Detective Sabotaged His Own Cases Because He Didnā€™t Like the Prosecutor. The Police Department Did Nothing to Stop Him.ā€ Kohler talks about that story, which focuses on local figures whose conflict reflects whatā€™s happening in other parts of the country.

Musical comedy about breast cancer ā€” ā€˜All Wigged Outā€™ ā€” comes to a St. Louis theater

7 months ago
About 300,000 Americans will be diagnosed with breast cancer in 2023. Despite its commonality, the process of fighting the disease is difficult for patients and their loved ones. Musicians and life partners Marcy Marxer and Cathy Fink can attest to this. Both of them experienced receiving breast cancer diagnoses and becoming each other's primary caregiver. Marxer, Fink and Dr. Jovita Oruwari of SSM Health Medical Group discuss the musical ā€œAll Wigged Outā€ in advance of its St. Louis showing.

How competing origin stories of St. Louisā€™ pork steak tangled Schnucks, Google and Wikipedia

7 months ago
Itā€™s undeniable that pork steak was popularized in St. Louis, but the identity of its inventor is sizzling with debate. The local supermarket chain Schnucks claims it deserves the title. Robert Moss, contributing barbecue editor for Southern Living, and restaurant critic for the Post & Courier, says that claim needs to be sent back to the kitchen. Moss investigated the controversy over the origin of the humble pork steak, and he shares why the pork steak is special, where it came from, and why Schnuck's, Google, and Wikipedia struggle to get the history right.

Urban composting is a growing business ā€” but cities like St. Louis are unprepared

7 months ago
More than a third of food grown in the U.S. goes uneaten. Food waste takes up space in landfills and produces methane, a powerful greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change. Harvest Public Media Reporter Eva Tesfaye digs into current zoning laws in places like St. Louis, where urban composting sites are beginning to pop up. The owners of New Earth Farm, John and Stacey Cline, share why they started their composting business in 2020.

Valley Park doubles down on rejecting lynching monument

7 months 1 week ago
A mob lynched a 24-year-old Black man named John Buckner in 1894. That's not disputed. But it's the location of Buckner's lynching that's creating controversy in Valley Park. Geoff Ward, a professor of African and African American Studies at Washington University and a member of the Reparative Justice Coalition, discusses the killing of John Buckner and how the record shows he was killed in Valley Park. Elizabeth Simons, community program manager for Great Rivers Greenway, describes the groupā€™s plan to install a plaque on the Meramec Greenway.

Why Missouriā€™s 8-month backlog for mental health services in jails is ā€˜good newsā€™ for officials trying to fix it

7 months 1 week ago
More than 250 people are languishing in Missouri jails as they await mental health treatment. That's an improvement from this summer, when the wait was 11 months. Missouri Independent reporter Clara Bates discusses the state's long struggle to treat people who have entered the criminal justice system. She also provides an update on Missouriā€™s Medicaid program, and why 40,000 kids have been removed from the program this summer.

Souls of Libertyā€™s ā€˜20,000 Hoursā€™ marks a milestone in brotherhood, music and career

7 months 1 week ago
Life-long friendships are truly special. Growing up with someone whoā€™s not blood-related but family just the same ā€” someone who holds you accountable and supports you through good and bad ā€” is a rare gift. And even rarer? Creating art together and navigating multiple career paths while becoming closer than ever. Thatā€™s the story of hip-hop duo Souls of Liberty. Tenelle Winmore and Ryan ā€œBig Escoā€ Brown share their story and what inspired their latest album, ā€œ20,000 Hours Vol. 1: Return of the Gods.ā€

Essay: 'I made peace with my dad's record ā€” by changing my name'

7 months 1 week ago
Washington University sophomore Julian Trejo was 15 years old when his mother helped him change his surname. He was ashamed to be the son of a felon, but now feels free. In this personal and sound-rich essay, Julian reflects on his upbringing and his quest to "not become a statistic ā€” not just another brown kid with an absent dad who went down the wrong path.ā€ Julian is a fellow with the River City Journalism Fund and a soccer journalist in St. Louis.

How two misdemeanors in Louisiana sent bounty hunters after a woman in Missouri

7 months 1 week ago
A dramatic case of bounty hunters, bail, and body cameras concluded last week in a federal courtroom in St. Louis. After deliberating for less than two hours, a jury found Wayne Lozier, owner of Bayou Boyz Fugitive Recovery, guilty of kidnapping and conspiracy. Katie Kull, courts reporter for the St. Louis Post Dispatch, covered the trial from the courtroom. She discusses the bounty hunter industry, Lozierā€™s defense, and the trialā€™s dramatic verdict.

Missouri sommelier traces her path from horse expert to wine pro

7 months 1 week ago
Alisha Blackwell-Calvert didnā€™t plan on becoming an expert in wine. Now sheā€™s a sommelier at Cinder House in St. Louis. She discusses her picks for favorite Missouri wines, and explains how the stateā€™s climate gives many local wines a distinctive ā€œmuskyā€ flavor. She also pours from her deep knowledge of wine varietals, and reveals what makes a good non-alcoholic wine work.

Attempt to clear homeless encampment at St. Louis City Hall fails

7 months 1 week ago
St. Louis officials attempted to clear a homeless encampment just outside St. Louis City Hall on Monday night. The city called off those plans after being met with resistance from residents, advocates and some city aldermen, but a spokesperson for Mayor Tishaura Jones said they would try again today. STLPR interim digital editor Brian Munoz explains what happened, why the city wants to remove the encampment, and what he heard from residents.

The Grand Motel, once a hotbed of crime, will become a center for abuse survivors

7 months 1 week ago
2534 North Grand has a reputation, and itā€™s not a good one. Thatā€™s the address of what was once the Grand Motel, a place notorious as a hotspot for crime, illicit drugs, and prostitution. And for decades, residents of surrounding neighborhoods have voiced their desire to see the nuisance property taken care of. Realtor Monique Buchanan shares her plans to transform the location into a center for survivors of domestic violence.

A St. Louis mediation program is a promising solution for landlord and tenant disputes

7 months 2 weeks ago
Eviction hearings are often tipped in favor of the landlord. A mediation program aims to balance the power dynamic by offering a free, non-legal route for problem solving. Cat Straubinger and Sheila Webster of the Conflict Resolution Center- St. Louis discuss how mediation works, and Isaiah Di Lorenzo, a landlord who has used the mediation service, talks about why itā€™s a compelling option for landlords.

Tony Award-winner, St. Louis native Norbert Leo Butz celebrates new album at the Sheldon

7 months 2 weeks ago
St. Louis native Norbert Leo Butzā€™s latest album is a conversation with his eldest daughter. He celebrates the release of ā€œKing of Heartsā€ with a homecoming concert Friday night at the Sheldon. Butz has won two Tony Awards for Best Actor in a Musical for his roles in ā€œDirty Rotten Scoundrelsā€ and ā€œCatch Me If You Can.ā€ Heā€™s also appeared in TV shows and films.

Dred Scott's great-great-granddaughter erects new monument fitting of his legacy

7 months 2 weeks ago
In the mid-1800s, an enslaved man named Dred Scott sued for his freedom in St. Louis. Scottā€™s yearslong legal battle culminated in an infamous U.S. Supreme Court ruling that helped push the country closer to civil war. Today, Dred Scott and his wife, Harriett Scott, are celebrated, and thereā€™s a new monument that befits that legacy in Calvary Cemetery in north St. Louis. STLPRā€™s Marissanne Lewis-Thompson talked with the Scottsā€™ great-great-granddaughter Lynne Jackson about that legacy in front of the newly erected monument.

Legal Roundtable: Missouri Supreme Court struck down red light cameras. Can St. Louis bring them back?

7 months 2 weeks ago
Concern over a rise in traffic violence has led St. Louis officials to consider an option the city first tried in 2007: Installing automated cameras to catch traffic violators and deter others. Missouri's Supreme Court ruled the ordinance unconstitutional in 2015, but the city is looking to try again. The Legal Roundtableā€™s Brenda Talent, Bill Freivogel and Eric Banks tackle that issue, as well as a $745 million verdict against the company that manufactures Whip-Its and a squabble between KMOV and KSDK on who owns the right to say ā€œFirst Alert Weather.ā€