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

1 year 1 month 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

1 year 1 month 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

1 year 1 month 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

1 year 1 month 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

1 year 1 month 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

1 year 1 month 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

1 year 1 month 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

1 year 1 month 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?

1 year 1 month 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€

Ethics concerns a ā€˜thorn in their sidesā€™ at U.S. Supreme Court, says NPRā€™s Nina Totenberg

1 year 1 month ago
NPR Legal Affairs Correspondent Nina Totenberg has covered the U.S. Supreme Court for about 50 years. As she gears up for a new court session that begins Monday, Totenberg discusses the cases sheā€™s watching. She also talks about the headline-grabbing ethics concerns swirling around the high court, breaking the Anita Hill story in 1991, and her recent memoir, ā€œDinners with Ruth.ā€

'Heartbroken' at KDHX: DJs, listeners react after station fires 10 volunteers

1 year 1 month ago
The unfolding controversy at KDHX on September 22 when the station fired 10 volunteer DJs. To understand what led to mass firings, how the beloved station got to this point, and the response from its fans and supporters, STLPR reporter Jeremy Goodwin shares insights from his recent coverage of the issue. Former KDHX DJ Ital K, who resigned from his show in solidarity on September 23, reveals what itā€™s like for longtime volunteers and supporters now watching the controversy unfold.

Ethics concerns a ā€˜thorn in their sidesā€™ at U.S. Supreme Court, says NPRā€™s Nina Totenberg

1 year 1 month ago
NPR Legal Affairs Correspondent Nina Totenberg has covered the U.S. Supreme Court for about 50 years. As she gears up for a new court session that begins Monday, Totenberg discusses the cases sheā€™s watching. She also talks about the headline-grabbing ethics concerns swirling around the high court, breaking the Anita Hill story in 1991, and her recent memoir, ā€œDinners with Ruth.ā€

Through the cemetery gates of Jefferson County goes Dennis Bentley, gravefinder

1 year 1 month ago
Dennis Bentley, St. Louis Public Radio systems specialist, has a notable hobby: He finds graves. As a volunteer for FindAGrave.com, he has submitted more than 5,000 pictures of gravestones: the small bejeweled ones, the wealthy towering ones and the just plain ol' regular ones. In this encore episode initially aired this January, Bentley discusses finding meaning as he visits cemeteries in Jefferson County.

Missouri places top 3 in book bans, while lawmakers brandish flamethrowers

1 year 1 month ago
A video of two Missouri elected officials blasting flamethrowers got a lot of attention online last week. While the display was symbolic, Missouriā€™s record on book bans is very real: A new report from PEN America shows Missouri had the 3rd highest number of book ban cases in the country last year. Lisa Gilbert, an instructor at Washington University (and who teaches future teachers) discusses the ongoing impact of book bans, and reflects on the importance of giving students access to knowledge, even when the content is difficult.