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1 dead, 3 injured in four-vehicle crash in Lincoln County

6 months 1 week ago
A four-vehicle crash on Highway 61 near Old Monroe, Mo. resulted in the death of a 23-year-old woman and three others injured, with the crash occurring when a Hyundai Sonata failed to stop at a stop sign and struck a Chevrolet Malibu, causing a chain reaction that also involved a Ford F-150 and Buick Lacrosse.
Nick Gladney

New Thai Restaurant Plans Jerseyville Grand Opening

6 months 1 week ago
JERSEYVILLE – A new Thai restaurant is coming to Jerseyville this summer with a Grand Opening set for June 6, 2025. Siam Thai announced Thursday night that they’re currently renovating a space in Jerseyville at 1600 S. State Street, Suite A, the former home of the Wok restaurant . Described as an “authentic Thai restaurant offering a fine dining experience,” Siam Thai plans to offer both dine-in and takeout options from its future Jerseyville location. Their business hours are currently listed on Google Maps as being open every day from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. This appears to be the restaurant’s first location in the Metro East, with the next-closest location in Chesterfield, Mo . Though menu items may vary between the two locations, a look through their Chesterfield menu offers a glance at the soups, salads, fried rice, stir-fry dishes, Thai E-San dishes, and more Siam Thai has to offer. Community members are already expressing excitement for the

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GoFund Me Launched: 15-Month-Old Undergoes Above-Elbow Amputation Following Complex Arm Surgeries

6 months 1 week ago
RED BUD — Fifteen-month-old Reece, born with arthrogryposis and gastroschisis, underwent an amputation recently above his right elbow following complications from surgeries intended to improve his arm function. The surgeries took place in March, and the complication was discovered during a cast removal appointment when Reece’s arm was found to have developed gangrene. Reece’s mother, Kayla McDaniel of Red Bud, has launched a GoFundMe campaign to help cover the mounting medical expenses and the cost of future prosthetics. The surgeries, which included a posterior elbow release with tricep plasty, wrist dorsal corrective osteotomy, and thumb thenar release with stiletto flap, were meant to straighten his wrist and thumb and allow his elbow to bend. “This surgery was essentially supposed to straighten his wrist and thumb and release his elbow so it could bend,” McDaniel said. “When we went in for his cast removal, we found his arm was black up to hi

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100 days, 100 attacks on the press

6 months 1 week ago

Dear Friend of Press Freedom,

This week, we take a look back at Trump 2.0’s first 100 days — and catch us live May 2, 2025, at 1 p.m. Eastern time for a discussion on the administration’s unprecedented attack on law firms and what they mean for the press. 

100 days, 100 attacks on the press, and counting

The second Trump administration’s 100th day came and went this week, but the attacks on the press and transparency kept coming. 

Our U.S. Press Freedom Tracker has a recap of some of the major press freedom violations it’s documented so far. We also put together a list of 100 times President Donald Trump and his team targeted the Fourth Estate. Here it is on Bluesky and X

It’s alarming how easy it was to get to that number. Before the ink dried, there were a couple more, including Trump’s ludicrous threat to sue The New York Times for “tortious interference” for quoting legal experts on the weakness of his frivolous shakedown of a lawsuit against CBS News. 

And to combat the excessive secrecy that defined this administration’s first few months, we also launched The Classified Catalog, a secrecy news tracker to help the public hold the government accountable. 

Department of Justice repeals protections for journalist-source confidentiality

Attorney General Pam Bondi has rescinded her predecessor’s policy restricting federal prosecutors from forcing journalists to reveal sources. 

As Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) Director of Advocacy Seth Stern said, “Everyone predicted this would happen in a second Trump administration, yet politicians in a position to prevent it prioritized empty rhetoric over putting up a meaningful fight.” Read our full statement

Using public records to break through the secrecy of the Texas prison system

Our series highlighting local journalists using public records to speak truth to power continues with a profile of Michelle Pitcher, a reporter at the Texas Observer who focuses on criminal justice.

Public records alone can’t tell the story, though — only those living it can. “As journalists, we should be seeking the people who are willing to tell those stories because no one wants to feel like they’re shouting into the abyss. And people are shouting. People do want to talk,” Pitcher said. Read more here

Rural America needs public media

We partnered with Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and the Committee to Protect Journalists to lead a letter urging congressional leadership to reject the White House’s request to rescind funds appropriated to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. 

The letter explains that “the harm of these cuts will disproportionately befall rural American communities. Less densely populated parts of the country tend to have fewer options for reliable news sources. ... When people lose access to their local media, they’re forced to turn instead to national media, which are less attuned to the needs of their communities.” Read the letter here.  

What we’re reading

100 days of attacks on transparency and the press (The Dissenter). FPF’s Seth Stern and Daniel Ellsberg Chair on Government Secrecy Lauren Harper joined The Dissenter’s podcast to talk about the state of press freedom and transparency 100 days into Trump 2.0. 

Alarm bells: Trump’s first 100 days ramp up fear for the press, democracy (Committee to Protect Journalists). “I really think we’re just beginning to understand the impact of, for example, removing the AP’s access, and what that will do to local news organizations,” said Kirstin McCudden, Managing Editor of our U.S. Press Freedom Tracker. 

Trump’s war on the press: 10 numbers from the US President’s first 100 days (Reporters Without Borders ). RSF lays out 10 key numbers that illustrate the administration’s unconstitutional assaults on press freedom and the right to reliable information.

Trump v. 60 Minutes is a stunning battle for the soul of US media (The Guardian). “In addition to all the principled reasons to not cave to Trump, there’s also the practical one that it doesn’t work,” Stern explained to The Guardian. “He will be right back at your door with his hands out the next day.”

Democrats had a shot at protecting journalists from Trump. They blew it (The Intercept). “Last year, Senate Democrats had a clear opportunity to make basic protections for journalists a matter of binding federal law, rather than mere policy that could be undone with a vendetta-laced memo … then Democratic leaders blew it.” 

The legal battle for DOGE transparency (Columbia Journalism Review). “More transparency means less corruption and potential for state capture. It’s an existential issue, and not one that our federal records laws or the people in the bureaucracy are equipped to deal with,” Harper told CJR.

US attorney for DC accuses Wikipedia of ‘propaganda,’ threatens nonprofit status (The Washington Post). Practically everything Ed Martin says is nonsense, but the one thing that’s totally believable is he doesn’t know federal prosecutors don’t investigate nonprofits’ tax compliance. 

Freedom of the Press Foundation

SLDC Board of Directors Elects Otis Williams As Interim President and Executive Director

6 months 1 week ago
ST. LOUIS - The St. Louis Development Corporation’s Board of Directors has voted to make Otis Williams interim president and executive director of SLDC. Williams brings significant experience to the position, having worked at SLDC for 22 years and served as president and executive director from 2013 to 2021. The City of St. Louis experienced key development successes during Williams’ first tenure at SLDC, including the development of Ballpark Village, Busch Stadium, and Cortex. He was instrumental in keeping the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency in St. Louis, leading to the construction of the federal agency’s new campus in North St. Louis. Williams has a distinguished military career, having served in the U.S. Army for nearly 30 years, reaching the rank of colonel and serving as chief of staff in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The SLDC Board and Neal Richardson, who has served as president and executive director since 2021, have reached a mutual agreement

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