The St. Louis division of the Drug Enforcement Administration will host a community summit Thursday night at new Northside Missionary Baptist Church's Family Life Center in Jennings.
One person is dead and four others are hurt after a series of shootings in St. Louis city in only a matter of hours. At this point, police say the shootings don’t appear to be linked even though three of them happened less than two hours apart.
The majority of officers assigned to a St. Louis police district called out sick on Wednesday, causing ripple effects across the city, according to police sources.
From taking shelter to taking the stage, Wednesday was the first night of the Veterans Association’s Got Talent showcase. The event is changing lives and perspectives for those who’ve sacrificed for our country.
We hear it time and time again that minutes save lives, but as St. Louisans depend on ambulances when they need them most, new data reveals an ambulance may not be available.
Rockwood High School students traditionally graduate after Memorial Day. In August, the district announced a change, citing feedback as one reason for moving the end of the school year to before the holiday. The change also resulted in an earlier than usual graduation day.
The first candidate to speak, Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), walked back his incendiary comment from earlier this month — “If you strike, you’re fired” — which he said earlier this month on the campaign trail in reference to the United Auto Workers (UAW) strike that’s currently underway in Detroit.
The St. Louis County Police Department is looking for two suspects in connection with a recent business break-in. Police refer to the suspects as "ice-cold bandits."
ST. LOUIS - A woman was charged Wednesday for allegedly shooting a coworker at their job following an argument. According to Sgt. Charles Wall, a spokesman for the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department, the shooting took place just before 4:10 p.m. at the Family Dollar on North Florissant Avenue near St. Louis Avenue, in the [...]
A busy Wednesday leads the Missouri Supreme Court to hearing arguments on three cases, including one pushing to overturn a St. Louis police "bill of rights law."