Tag: St. Louis Metro News

  • St. Louis County Saw Its Highest Ever Number of Pedestrian Deaths in 2023

    St. Louis County Saw Its Highest Ever Number of Pedestrian Deaths in 2023

    More pedestrians were killed in St. Louis County in 2023 than any previous year, even as the number of pedestrian deaths in the City of St. Louis dropped to its lowest level in five years.

    That’s according to the 2023 Crash Report released yesterday by Trailnet, the local nonprofit that advocates for pedestrians and cyclists. The report offers an annual look at how the region is affected by traffic violence.

    This year, some of the news is actually good … or, at least, better.

    “In 2023, the City of St. Louis had its lowest number of total traffic fatalities since 2018,” Trailnet reports. “For the first time since 2014, there were fewer than 10 pedestrian fatalities in the City.” Eight people were killed. However, the report says, the number of overall crashes in the city increased slightly, and there were still an alarming number of people in the city injured by cars while walking (225) and biking (49).

    The county’s trends are even more troubling. In addition to notching a record-setting 28 pedestrian deaths last year, Trailnet writes that the total number of crashes involving pedestrians was also up significantly — the 291 in St. Louis County made 2023 the second most dangerous year on record after 2016. Also, “Crashes involving people biking jumped to over 100 total bicycle crashes, the highest in five years, and a stark increase from the previous three years. Combined pedestrian and bicycle crashes reached a total of 395, the second highest total in 15 years.”

    Trailnet notes that, as in past years, pedestrian crashes in both city and county were disproportionately located in Black and brown neighborhoods. That’s something that mirrors national trends; as Angie Schmitt has detailed in her seminal book Right of Way: Race, Class and the Silent Epidemic of Pedestrian Deaths in America, the typical victim in a pedestrian fatality isn’t a wealthy urbanite looking at their phone, but rather a working-class person trying to cross a busy road to get to the bus in a part of town with subpar sidewalks and crosswalks.

    To that end, Trailnet’s report breaks down where the most crashes occurred in both city and county (unsurprisingly, Grand Boulevard figures prominently in the city, and Halls Ferry/New Halls Ferry Road is the most dangerous road in the county). It also calls for policy changes to get fatalities to drop.

    “We need a built environment that caters to humans, not cars,” Trailnet concludes. “We need to better educate new drivers. We need to find an equitable, safe and affordable way to enforce traffic laws. We need up-to-date local and state policies that support Complete Streets, Vision Zero and more.”


    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • They Built New Housing in East St. Louis. Now They Need People to Buy Into Their Vision

    They Built New Housing in East St. Louis. Now They Need People to Buy Into Their Vision

    River barge magnate Mark Mestemacher has a rich history of establishing and supporting wrestling programs for young people around the region. That includes the East St. Louis Wrestling Club, which he founded in 2008 and housed in the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Center.

    But just one year later, the JJK Center shut down due to financial problems, laying off 32 employees. Mestemacher, who lived in Edwardsville, had stayed in his lane, and hadn’t had much, if any, involvement with the Center outside of his program. In the wake of the closure, someone suggested he meet with the legendary Olympian.

    The meeting changed his life.

    “We cried 45 minutes out of that first hour,” Mestemacher, now 67, recalls. “The need was so great, and she had such a desire to make a difference in the lives of people.”

    Long before she won Olympic gold in the heptathlon and the long jump, Jackie Joyner grew up in an underprivileged neighborhood in East St. Louis. But in the 1960s, she watched a space-age geodesic domed building being erected in nearby Lincoln Park, which would open as the Mary Brown Community Center. “It became my second home,” Joyner-Kersee recalls.

    The center gave her many opportunities and enriched her life — opportunities she wanted to provide others. But at that time, in 2009, her dream was slipping away.

    With their shared passion for helping children, a love of sports, and deep religious faith, the two bonded instantly. Mestemacher took their connection as a sign from God that he needed to adopt Joyner-Kersee’s dream for East St. Louis as his own. He joined the Center’s board and personally paid off the substantial debts. After two years of rebuilding the organization, the Center resumed operations in 2012.

    “There were people who suggested bankruptcy,” recalls former board member Debra Aerne. “But Jackie was against that, and they” — Joyner-Kersee, Mestemacher and other board members — “didn’t want anyone to be able to say they were cheated by the Center. They wanted to protect Jackie’s name.”

    Mestemacher, at least, has now gone far beyond that. The nonprofit organization that his work with Joyner-Kersee helped to inspire, Lansdowne UP, is investing in East St. Louis in a way that might seem unfathomable to anyone who’s driven through the city.

    In 1950, East St. Louis was the fourth-largest city in Illinois, with a population north of 82,000. Today, only 17,000 call the beleaguered community home. No market rate subdivision has been built there in at least 50 years.

    Lansdowne Park, with homes slated to go on the market in just a few weeks, will be the first.

     

    Lansdowne Park's homes offer open floor plans and high ceilings. - ZACHARY LINHARES

    ZACHARY LINHARES

    Lansdowne Park’s homes offer open floor plans and high ceilings.

    Wrestling With Bigger Ideas

    After his life-changing meeting with Joyner-Kersee, Mestemacher’s focus expanded far beyond wrestling and into the city that raised her.

    “Facing the Center’s athletic fields, there was a row of derelict drug houses and overgrown lots,” Mestemacher says. “The wrestling club bought them, tore them down and hired the coaches and the kids to clean up the land. Many of these boys don’t have father figures, so this was another opportunity for the coaches to spend time and mentor them.”

    Funded by Mestemacher, the East St. Louis Wrestling Club continued to acquire land, and to direct mentoring and job training programs. One day their alarmed accountant informed them that based on revenue, the club had morphed into the largest wrestling organization of its kind in the nation. Concerned that it came off as a money-laundering operation, they were advised to form a separate organization for the non-wrestling activities.

    The accountant’s concerns were well-founded. When they tried to spin off Lansdowne UP, it took 18 months of auditing to convince a skeptical IRS.

    As Aerne explains, there’s now an entire ecosystem radiating out of the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Center, which includes Mestemacher’s education and development nonprofit Lansdowne UP, of which Joyner-Kersee is on the board, urban farming partnerships with the Donald Danforth Plant Sciences Center and the University of Illinois, and a building trades partnership with Southwestern Illinois College.

    Lansdowne UP is taking the lead on the residential development side — and it’s doing it in a way that gets current neighbors involved rather than displacing them.

    The nonprofit has purchased more than 2,600 lots in the Lansdowne area of East St. Louis, which is anchored by the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Center and bordered by I-64 to the south, I-55 to the north, 9th Street to the west and 40th Street to the east.

    The approximately 250-acre area is already graced by the attractive Jones Park, with its mature trees, horseshoe lake and a pavilion similar to the one in Carondelet Park, but thanks to Lansdowne UP, most of the surrounding area is park-like as well. That’s due to their “Lawns for Learning” initiative, which teaches landscaping skills in the mornings and life skills in the afternoons.

    “Our people are paid to learn,” Mestemacher says. “We’ll do things like create a menu and teach them how to shop and then prepare the meal.”

    The supervisors at Lansdowne UP are called mentors, and each has only a handful of employees to oversee.

    The nonprofit was able to successfully rehab four existing homes, with three more underway. But the vast majority of lots were vacant or had homes too far gone to repair, and those parcels have been cleared. Once garbage and undergrowth are taken away, the lots are mowed and lovingly maintained by the Lawns for Learning participants in their easily recognizable Lansdowne UP shirts or hoodies.

    Lansdowne UP has even helped three of its employees start their own lawn businesses, which the organization now contracts with.

     

    Jackie Joyner-Kersee grew up in East St. Louis before becoming one of track and field's all-time greats. - ZACHARY LINHARES

    ZACHARY LINHARES

    Jackie Joyner-Kersee grew up in East St. Louis before becoming one of track and field’s all-time greats.

    God Had Other Plans

    For more than a century, when St. Louisans said they were “going to the East Side,” it meant they were up to no good. But Joyner-Kersee says despite that reputation for vice, East St. Louis was always a city of churches.

    “This is a community built on faith,” the warm and approachable Joyner-Kersee says. “East St. Louis is blessed to have a lot of good people. Ninety percent are awesome people who want a safe community and aren’t part of all that other junk that’s going on.

    “While the population is only 17,000, it swells to 30,000 on Sunday,” she laughs.

    That vice and virtue duality comes into focus as Mestemacher gives a reporter a tour in his unassuming minivan. He pulls over near a group of men loitering outside of an old brick corner store. “These guys are selling drugs,” he says as he watches them, completely unconcerned with his conspicuous presence. He watches unflinchingly, as if face to face with the opposing side in a holy war for the children of East St. Louis.

    “Satan is a powerful force,” he says.

    For the lots they’ve cleared behind the Jackie Joyner-Kersee athletic fields, Mestemacher had drawn up plans for condos with storefront retail, but the Illinois State Police expressed interest in the land as a potential site for its new $55 million district headquarters. Lansdowne UP completed the RFQ and offered the agency the site for one dollar. Their proposal was selected, and now a 62,500-square-foot building, along with a 21,000-square-foot warehouse, is slated for the site.

    “I let God take the lead, and that’s why I don’t worry too much about mapping out the next steps,” Mestemacher says. “The townhome project is an example. That was my idea, but God had other plans.”

    Those plans have fascinating, and sometimes jarring, ways of revealing themselves. While Mestemacher was initially focused almost exclusively on the areas east of the train tracks dividing Lansdowne, a chance occurrence changed that. Mestemacher was driving west of the tracks one pitch-black night when suddenly a child appeared feet from his headlights, and he slammed on the brakes.

    “I nearly killed a kid!” he recalls. For Mestemacher, that was God telling him to expand his focus to that area of town, which he has now done.

    While on the board, Aerne said she found Mestemacher’s generosity to be humbling, and asked how he could give so much away. “He said it’s easy because he doesn’t see it as his money,” she recalls.

    The way Mestemacher sees it, God’s providing the funds to help East St. Louis, and he is merely the steward.

     

    Lansdowne Park's houses will go on sale next month, with an open house celebration on May 4. - ZACHARY LINHARES

    ZACHARY LINHARES

    Lansdowne Park’s houses will go on sale next month, with an open house celebration on May 4.

    A Neighborhood Rises

    For most of us, East St. Louis feels like it’s a world away, so it’s easy to forget just how close it is. From the river, you can get to Lansdowne Park in about 10 minutes, and from the bright new suburban-style streets, the Arch looms prominently. After all, Lansdowne is as close to the Arch as IKEA.

    Joyner-Kersee says that her hometown was once a place where the entire neighborhood helped raise children. “Even the adults who were doing something they weren’t supposed to be doing would tell us kids, ‘This isn’t what you should be doing,’” she laughs. That neighborhood vibe vanished with the population, leaving the remaining residents barricaded in a sea of disinvestment.

    Beginning with Lansdowne Park, a 20-home suburban-style subdivision where modern farmhouse-style homes face a central common space for gathering and play, Lansdowne UP aims to restore the sense of neighbors looking after neighbors.

     

    Mark Mestemacher will move into Lansdowne Park. "It's hard to invest in young people and talk to them about a better way of life, and then go home to a different community." - ZACHARY LINHARES

    ZACHARY LINHARES

    Mark Mestemacher will move into Lansdowne Park. “It’s hard to invest in young people and talk to them about a better way of life, and then go home to a different community.”

    Lansdowne Park’s first homeowners are Mark and Carol Mestemacher. “If we’re going to make a difference, we’re going to live here,” he says. “It’s hard to invest in young people and talk to them about a better way of life, and then go home to a different community.”

    Although the couple bankrolled the entire development, they went through the process of purchasing their $360,000, 1,600-square-foot ranch so the neighborhood has a comp for lenders.

    Most of the neighborhood is now built out, with no empty lots. If not for the St. Louis skyline, you could easily think you’re in St. Charles County. The bright and airy one- and two-story houses have open floor plans, high ceilings, and gorgeous kitchens and bathrooms.

    The neighborhood has raised the hopes of East St. Louis natives, including Lecia J. Rives, the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Center’s COO.

    “After winning the double gold medals at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, Jackie took 100 East St. Louis students to the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade,” Rives says. “And I was one of them. It was my first time on a plane. After that I’d send her letters and she’d actually reply. After earning my law degree, I went to work for the State’s Attorney’s Office in Chicago, but I just felt called to come back.”

    Lansdowne UP’s Director of Administration Kevin Green was living in his native New Orleans when his mother-in-law passed away, and he and his wife, Monique Spann Green, returned to East St. Louis to clean out her home. More than a decade later, they are still here. The couple says they answered the Lord’s call to minister to local people who have lost faith. “My wife remembers the early ’60s, the beautiful tree-lined streets. The high school was integrated then. The enormity of the work here is daunting, but we’re seeing a glimmer of hope.

    Green, who is Black, says there are people who call any development “gentrification,” but when afforded the opportunity, he sits down with critics to find understanding.

    A big reason for bringing the middle class back into East St. Louis is to restore its tax base, so it may seem counterintuitive to seek TIF funding for the project. But Mestemacher explains that local taxes are unusually high because so few are paying in. “Taxes are important, but they need to be reasonable taxes,” he says. With the 20-year, 75 percent tax abatement for the new homes, the owners in Lansdowne Park will pay rates similar to surrounding communities in the Metro East. The thought is once the TIF expires, many more people will be living in East St. Louis, causing rates to decrease.

    How did Lansdowne UP arrive at the mid-to-upper $300K price point? That’s what the homes cost to construct. The organization won’t make any profit.

    And while Lansdowne Park is not exactly cheap, the next development will consist of stylish container homes ideal for first-time homebuyers.

    Community Roots

    People are often pulled back to their hometowns, and East St. Louis is no exception, even when there’s nothing left to come home to.

    “The neighborhood will be long gone, but folks in their 50s, 60s, 70s will come back and hang out where their houses used to be,” Mestemacher says. “They’ll play music, picnic, like they’re in a park.”

    The prevailing thought among many stakeholders is that a sizable number of people with roots in East St. Louis would like to move back. “If you build it, they will come,” seems like a convincing mantra when people are coming even when nothing has been built.

    Speaking of roots, millions are being poured into urban farming programs and infrastructure aimed at combating food insecurity in East St. Louis and the surrounding area. Rising next to the JJK Center and the Lansdowne UP offices is a 100-meter passive solar greenhouse, which will be the first of its kind in the U.S. It will have the capacity to produce 30,000 pounds of food per year, with an energy bill of a few dollars a day. This effort is part of the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Food, Agriculture, Nutrition (FAN) Innovation Center, which is a collaboration between the JJK Foundation, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center and Lansdowne UP.

    The dynamic partnership provides educational and professional development programming in agriculture, STEAM, food innovation, nutrition, physical activity and entrepreneurialism to youth and community members.

    Agriculture is Mestemacher’s field of study and his business. As a partner in Ceres Consulting LLC, he owns and operates barges that ship agricultural products throughout America’s inland waterways. The cost of buying a barge has doubled in recent years, but since Ceres was founded in 1986, they were already well-equipped before the increases.

    Love Thy Neighbor

    While Jackie Joyner-Kersee can run fast, few can run longer, farther and faster than St. Louisans running from poor Black people. This has left our region hollowed out, and all the silver bullets we’ve deployed to try to fix it, from stadiums to highways to malls to trains and trolleys, haven’t worked. There are some who believe the answer lies in returning to the places we’ve run away from, investing in and lifting up the people who are there, and even living among them.

    In the coming days, Jackie Joyner-Kersee and those she’s inspired will invite the entire metro to come out to see what they’ve been up to. Imagine if we all showed up, like any good neighbor responding to a housewarming invitation, and sincerely wished them well.

    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • How Pervy Pill Peddler Dr. Craig Spiegel Got Popped

    How Pervy Pill Peddler Dr. Craig Spiegel Got Popped

    In March 2022, Bridgeton police investigated pediatrician Craig Spiegel for a possible sexual assault after the mother of a patient accused the doctor of forcibly putting his hands down her pants. The patient’s mother was in an exam room where, moments before, Spiegel had been performing a check-up on her son.

    That investigation fizzled after five months, with no charges being filed. But in the course of looking into the matter, law enforcement got permission to search the doctor’s phone. Its contents would become fodder for the 25-count federal indictment that the U.S. Attorney’s Office hit the pediatrician with last month, accusing him of a long-running scheme of swapping sex for controlled substances. Prosecutors say that Spiegel illegally doled out over 1,200 individual prescriptions, amounting to 73,000 pills, to at least two dozen women.

    The 67-year-old Spiegel is a graduate of the prestigious Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland. He had a courtesy appointment to medical school at Washington University. Publicly available photos of Spiegel show him wearing colorful suspenders and bowties, posing with young patients whom he saw at the Bridgeton pediatric clinic which, according to his LinkedIn, he opened in the early 1990s.

    How an investigation into an alleged assault at that clinic turned into a federal prosecution alleging years of illegal behavior is detailed in a 57-page application for a search warrant unsealed in federal court in St. Louis earlier this week.

    According to that document, Spiegel sat for an interview with detectives investigating the assault allegations made by the young patient’s mother, identified only as A.M. On August 30, 2022, they also searched his office. Office staffers were reportedly surprised that the search was in relation to a sex crime, as they told authorities they assumed it pertained to “the adult drug users” who came by the pediatric office.

    By that time, authorities were also investigating Spiegel for possibly molesting A.M.’s daughter and for spanking a former employee.

    The next day, Spiegel was taken into custody by Bridgeton police and he spent 24 hours in jail in St. Charles.

    Ultimately, the St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office opted not to file charges on the assault. Surveillance video from the hospital contradicted aspects of A.M.’s story. She’d also made comments to authorities about having busted out of a window of his office, a fact that the investigation didn’t support. St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office spokesman Chris King says the decision not to file charges came down to too many conflicting and incredible statements by the victim.

    But on August 31, 2022, prosecutors were still mulling charges, and Bridgeton detectives went to the jail where Spiegel was being held and offered him a ride back to his office.

    During the ride, Spiegel began to ask what would happen next in the investigation. He also asked detectives when he would get his iPhone back.

    The detectives told the pediatrician he’d get his phone back more quickly if he’d consent to it being searched, thereby preventing the need for authorities to secure a warrant. Spiegel agreed. The contents of the iPhone were downloaded by law enforcement and the device was returned to the doctor the next day.

    And while the allegations from the patient’s mother were complicated, what investigators found on Spiegel’s phone was unambiguous — and evidence of crimes that had gone on for years. That includes hundreds of text messages between Spiegel and numerous women he prescribed controlled substances to in exchange for sexual favors and sexually explicit images, many of which were found on the phone as well.

    Spiegel regularly replied to nude photos with messages like, “You have great boobs!!!!” and “I want to suck on those nipples!!!” followed by confirmation that their prescriptions for drugs like Percocet and Lortab and in one case even an antibiotic had been sent to pharmacies.

    At least two women Spiegel texted with later told investigators they met the doctor at his Bridgeton clinic numerous times where they performed hand jobs on him either in his office or an exam room, with the understanding they could get “any prescription [they] wanted” from in exchange for the sexual favors.

    The application for the search warrant indicates Spiegel did take some steps to avoid detection, including using other people’s identities to prescribe medications and altering which pharmacies the prescriptions were called into.

    Many of the women the pediatrician prescribed medications to appear to have been hard up in one way or another; texts show several women struggling to arrange a ride to see Spiegel. In other cases, when law enforcement finally interviewed these women, one interview was conducted at a probation office, another as a state prison.

    Despite the brush with the law in August 2022, Spiegel appears to have continued apace swapping drugs for sex. The application for the search warrant, which was filed in April 2023, says that in the previous three months, Spiegel exchanged more than 1,400 text messages with women he was illicitly prescribing controlled substances to.

    That would prove only the beginning of Spiegel’s unwillingness — or inability — to stop even while knowing he was under investigation.

    His practice was searched for a second time, this time by federal investigators. In June 2023, at the behest of federal law enforcement, Spiegel came to the U.S. Attorney’s Office and listened as federal prosecutors conveyed to him the seriousness of the charges he was facing. Prosecutors stressed to him the “wealth of evidence in this case,” chief among that evidence thousands of Spiegel’s own text messages.

    Yet according to court filings, he continued writing illicit prescriptions.

    It wasn’t until November 1 that Spiegel announced his retirement and closed his Bridgeton practice, according to a post made to the practice’s Facebook page.

    However, even after that, it’s not clear if Spiegel stopped writing prescriptions, as he refused to surrender his DEA registration.

    The doctor was charged federally March 7 and taken into custody shortly thereafter.

    At a March 11 detention hearing to determine whether Spiegel should be kept in pre-trial custody, Assistant U.S. Attorney Amy Sestric said that Spiegel’s ability to prescribe illicit substances combined with his history of “preying on vulnerable women” makes him a poor candidate for bond.

    U.S. District Judge John Ross agreed, ordering the doctor to remain locked up as his case works its way through the courts.

    In a motion arguing against Spiegel’s pretrial release, Sestric referenced the story of N.L., which Sestric said demonstrated the extent to which the pediatrician was “undeterred by any consequence to his actions.”

    The data pulled from Spiegel’s phone indicated that one of the many women he texted with was an Illinois resident named N.L., with whom he met in person and swapped explicit pictures with in exchange for Xanax and mixed amphetamine salts, the generic description for Adderall.

    Spiegel’s texts show him being petulant with her. In September 2021 she messaged him that she had no way to get to his Bridgeton clinic. “You can’t even send pictures,” he wrote back.

    Later that month she texted him, “I’m completely out of medicine and I am not sure how we can do this. I want to see you[.] can you make it to my place this weekend.”

    On April 1, 2022, N.L. asked Spiegel to send in her prescriptions to a Walmart pharmacy. Spiegel texted he’d done so the following day. He also asked N.L if her girlfriend was around the coming weekend. N.L. replied, “No.”

    The following month Spiegel texted her, “Haven’t heard from you in a while.” N.L. didn’t reply.

    The pediatrician followed up in June, “What happened to you?” and again got no answer.

    By then, N.L. had been deceased for more than two months. She was found dead in her St. Clair County home on April 4, two days after Spiegel confirmed he’d sent her prescriptions into Walmart.

    A coroner determined the cause of death to be an accidental overdose, finding in her system norfentanyl, amphetamine, and methamphetamine. She was 40 years old.

    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • What We Know About the Hazelwood Fight That Hospitalized Kaylee Gain

    What We Know About the Hazelwood Fight That Hospitalized Kaylee Gain

    Early last month, a video of a teen brutally beating 16-year-old Kaylee Gain and pounding her head against the pavement went viral, prompting nationwide outrage fueled by conservative social media accounts.

    The video, shot near Hazelwood East High School, where Gain and her assailant are both students, appears to have been first widely circulated by the right-wing social media presence “Libs of TikTok” which is famous for its conspiracy theories and rage bait.

    Now Gain’s assailant faces a hearing in juvenile court, police have referred eight others for possible charges in connection with the fight and Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey has launched an investigation into the school district. Gain remains hospitalized, though she is out of the intensive care unit.

    Misinformation surrounding the fight is swirling and even Bailey has spewed incorrect facts about the incident. Here’s a round-up of what we know to be true.

    A Brutal Beating

    The fight occurred on March 8, after school hours and approximately a quarter mile from Hazelwood East, according to an attorney for the school district.

    On March 10, Libs of TikTok posted a video of the fight to X saying: “GRAPHIC: A student in @HazelwoodSD is in the hospital in critical condition after being brutally beaten with her head smashed against the pavement by a mob of students. Multiple people watch and do nothing. You won’t hear about this story on the MSM” [Mainstream Media].

    Despite the account’s claims, St. Louis media, including the Post-Dispatch, KSDK, and KMOV, soon covered the fight extensively.

    The video opens with the two teenage girls appearing to square off against each other in a residential street. Quickly, though, the 15-year-old is on top of Gain, hands around her collar and repeatedly smashing her head into the street, as the RFT previously reported.  The teen twitches and convulses on the street as several other peripheral brawls break out among the dozen or so young people around her.

    The Aftermath — and the Catalyst

    Gain suffered traumatic brain injuries in the beating and was in critical condition for more than a week. Her family posted an update to her GoFundMe on March 22 saying Gain is stable and was moved out of the ICU. An attorney for the family more recently told NBC News that she has no recollection of the fight and has limited speech. She cannot walk on her own, he said.

    The day after the fight, 15-year-old Maurnice DeClue was arrested and charged with assault. Her family tells the St. Louis Post Dispatch that she is a “diligent and helpful” honor-roll student.

    Since DeClue’s arrest, eight more teens have been referred to family court and may face charges in connection to the fight. The teens range in age from 14 to 17 years old. Four are male, and four are female.

    It is unclear what led to the brawl.

    However, KSDK reported recently that, according to DeClue’s lawyer, Gain had been suspended from school after a fight on March 7 — just one day before the beating that was captured on video. “She was suspended from school for fighting someone else,” attorney Greg Smith said of Gain. “And despite that, found her way back towards the neighborhood around the high school the following day at dismissal time.”

    An attorney for Gain’s family confirmed the suspension.

    DeClue’s family has stated that DeClue had no previous involvement with the juvenile justice system.

    The 15-year-old was “described by her teachers as a diligent and helpful student who never caused any disruptions,” Tina DeClue told the Post-Dispatch.

    A Political Fight

    Libs of TikTok and other conservative social media presences (including Attorney General Bailey) have stated that the school’s Diversity Equity and Inclusion policies led to the incident.

    Despite seemingly making her a martyr in an agenda to discredit DEI, in nearly every post about Gain Libs of TikTok spells her name wrong (it’s Kaylee, not Kailee).

    “Hazelwood School District won an award for their DEI initiatives and have a history of discriminating against white people,” the account said in a post to X.

    Part of what is fueling conservative outrage over the fight is that Gain is white and her assailant in the video is Black.

    The account’s repeated tirades against Hazelwood’s DEI initiatives seem to have spurred Bailey to action and inspired his latest headline grab.

    Bailey announced on March 22 that his office will be investigating how the Hazelwood School District’s “radical DEI programs resulted in such despicable safety failures.”

    That’s even though, as the RFT’s Ryan Krull has reported, the only connection between the district’s DEI policies and the attack is St. Louis County police officers’ failures to cooperate with them. The district asked that officers working in the school complete 10 hours of DEI training. The Hazelwood, Florissant and St. Louis County police departments balked, and the school resource officer program at Hazelwood East has reportedly been on hold since.

    Cindy Reeds Ormsby, attorney for the district, fact-checked Bailey with a scathing letter dated March 26. She pointed out that Bailey got the date, location and setting of the fight completely wrong and emphasized that it took place after school and off school property.

    She notes that his idea of investigating this as a diversity, equity and inclusion matter is … an interesting choice.

    “The Statement of Solidarity you refer to in your correspondence is not board policy. You have failed to identify a single ‘race-based policy’ that has led to the absence of [school resource officers] and how such policy was prioritized over student safety,” she writes.


    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • Suit Against Former St. Louis Cop Who Killed Katlyn Alix Is Dismissed

    Suit Against Former St. Louis Cop Who Killed Katlyn Alix Is Dismissed

    ST. LOUIS POLICE DEPARTMENT

    Nathaniel Hendren pled guilty to involuntary manslaughter in the killing of Officer Katlyn Alix.

    The last legal piece of the Russian-roulette style killing of one St. Louis police officer at the hands of another was settled yesterday in St. Louis Circuit Court — a quiet close to an incident that fueled scandalous headlines in early 2019.

    Yesterday’s hearing in front of Judge Bryan Hettenbach ended the civil lawsuit filed by the mother of police officer Katlyn Alix against former officer Nathaniel Hendren, two other officers and the city. Hendren is currently serving a seven-year prison sentence for manslaughter, which he pleaded guilty to in February 2020. He is set to be released from prison in October.

    “The judicial process for Mr. Hendren is done,” attorney Talmage Newton said yesterday, referring to matters involving his client in criminal, civil and bankruptcy courts, which Newton says have now all been adjudicated.

    All have their roots in one deadly, bizarre night at Hendren’s apartment: January 23, 2019.

    Hendren, then 29 and a former Marine, had been a city cop for about a year and was in a relationship with Alix, 24. Alix was herself a military veteran and, at the time, married to a different SLMPD officer, though Hendren would later say that he was in love with Alix and the two had plans to move in together.

    The night began with Alix texting Hendren to say she would bring him medicine for his cold. The two then ate dinner together at Hendren’s apartment. Despite Hendren being scheduled for an overnight shift, he consumed an “unknown quantity of alcohol,” according to court filings.

    Hendren’s shift began a little before 11 p.m.

    After going on the clock, Hendren and his partner, Patrick Riordan, texted Alix, who wasn’t on duty that night, that they could use a “beginning of shift smoke.”

    The two on-duty officers responded to a call about an assault but ignored another one about a triggered building alarm and headed to Hendren’s Carondelet apartment instead.

    Another officer texted Riordan asking him why he and his partner were not responding to the tripped alarm. “WTF dude. What’s so important you can’t take this call?” the other officer texted. Hendren and Riordan eventually coded it as a false alarm.

    According to court filings, Alix arrived at the Carondelet apartment a few minutes before Hendren and Riordan. By around midnight, all three were there.

    At the apartment, court filings say that Alix and Hendren became intoxicated and the two engaged in a Russian-roulette style game. In the early hours of January 24, Hendren put a single bullet in a revolver, spun its cylinder and then “dry fired” the weapon several times.

    “Finally, Hendren pointed the revolver at Alix’s chest and pulled the trigger once more,” wrote Judge Joan Moriarty in an order related to a civil suit that would later be filed against Hendren. The bullet struck Alix and, despite Hendren taking her to a nearby hospital in his police cruiser, she was pronounced dead later that morning.

    Hendren was charged a few days later with involuntary manslaughter. He pled guilty to that charge and armed criminal action in February 2020 and was sentenced to seven years in prison.

     

    Officer Katlyn Alix died in 2019. - COURTESY SLMPD

    COURTESY SLMPD

    Officer Katlyn Alix died in 2019.

    Between the charges being filed and the guilty plea, Alix’s mother, Aimee Wahlers, filed a civil lawsuit against Hendren, Riordan, their SLMPD supervisor and the city.

    The suit alleged that Hendren had a “complicated psychiatric history” and that he forced “previous girlfriends to play ‘Russian Roulette,’ and engage in other sexual activity that involved firearms.”

    At the time, the Russian roulette incident was only the latest in a string of scandals for the department. In just the two years leading up to the deadly night at Hendren’s apartment, a white officer shot his Black off-duty colleague, a Black undercover detective was beaten by fellow officers during a protest, and four officers were charged with stealing overtime pay, among other scandals.

    But in August 2021, Judge Moriarty dismissed the case against the city and the police supervisor, finding that Hendren’s acts were done outside the scope of his job as a police officer. Moriarty wrote, “There is no way to reasonably correlate the consumption of alcohol, ignoring the dispatched emergency calls, going back to your private residence, outside of your assigned patrol zone, to ‘smoke’ with your girlfriend and then shoot her with your personal weapon, with the duties of a police officer.”

    Riordan agreed to pay $300,000 to settle the case and eventually paid Wahlers $225,000, according to court records.

    With Riordan’s judgment and the other two dismissals, Hendren was the sole remaining defendant in Wahlers’ civil case.

    Hendren then filed for bankruptcy last November.

    According to those bankruptcy filings, Hendren had $32,000 in a checking account and a few hundred dollars on his books in prison. He is serving his sentence at a prison in Minnesota, likely due for his own safety as a former officer in the prison system. The bankruptcy case was closed last month.

    “We can’t sue Nate because he declared bankruptcy,” says Johnny Simon Jr. of the Simon Law Firm, the attorney for Wahlers.

    Simon says that he hopes to see changes on two fronts, the first of which relates to the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department. “I would hope that they do a better job hiring, supervising and monitoring the folks they have policing our city streets,” he says.

    He also says that the city escaped liability in this case. With Hendren bankrupt and Riordan with limited insurance, there was no legal avenue for Wahlers to get what Simon calls “real compensation.”

    Earlier this month, in a sit-down interview with KMOV’s Lauren Trager, Wahlers said that the department won’t meet with her and she feels like they have neglected the memory of Alix, who would have turned 30 two weeks ago. “They need to change. But what are they willing to change? That’s up to them because they’re not being held accountable,” Wahlers told Trager. She also announced she’d set up a Stray Rescue fund in the memory of her daughter, an avid animal lover.

    Simon says Wahlers may be able to get something from Missouri’s Tort Victims’ Compensation Fund, a pool of state-controlled money set aside for people who are injured “due to the negligence or recklessness” of someone who has gone on to declare bankruptcy or is for some other reason unable to pay compensation.

    “That would be our hope to pursue a claim [there] and see what happens,” Simon says.

    He adds, ‘We would hope a tragedy like this never happens again.”

     

    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • Tech Exec’s Interest in Lindbergh School Board Raises Concerns

    Tech Exec’s Interest in Lindbergh School Board Raises Concerns

    The conservative outrage express is barreling hard toward the school board governing the Lindbergh School District, courtesy of a political action committee run by Martin Bennet, a Des Peres man who is the regional manager of an Internet services company that markets to schools.

    Direct mail flyers began appearing in the mailboxes of Lindbergh voters last week that were paid for by the St. Louis County Family Association Political Action Committee, which Bennett launched in January.

    The flyers promote the candidacies of David Randelman and David Kirschner, who are among the four candidates vying for the two seats on the eight-member board at stake in the April 2 election. Randelman and Kirschner are running on platforms demanding improved test scores and greater fiscal responsibility.

    The flyers attack diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, programs supposedly being overseen in the Lindbergh School District. 

    The flyers define DEI as driven by a “huge need to re-educate our white students” and to “make social justice and anti-racism a priority in the district.”

    The flyers also claim that the district’s “emphasis on equity was not transparent” and that “academic rigor has declined in the district.”

    The St. Louis County Family Association Political Action Committee has so far raised nearly $20,000 in cash — with $10,000 of that sum coming in cash from Bennet, according to Missouri Ethics Commission records.

    In addition, Bennet made an $11,279 in-kind contribution to the political action committee, according to the latest MEC report.

    Bennet is the regional manager for Common Goal Systems, of Elmhurst, Illinois, an Internet learning company that markets a wide range of services to public and private schools.

    The SLCF PAC has so far spent $6,122 on direct mail, plus $1,939.74 each on the candidacies of Randelman and Kirschner — by far the biggest donations each man has reported receiving, MEC reports show.

    In addition, Bennet has made $900 in in-kind contributions to Randelman and Kirschner, MEC records show.

    Megan Fennell, the mother of two Lindbergh students, raises concerns about the divisive tone of the flyers. But her biggest issue is the potential financial conflict of interest involving Bennet, his company and any business dealings CGS might bring before the Lindbergh School Board.

    “The financial gain is my concern,” Fennell says of Bennet. “That a corporation is trying to buy seats on the board.”

    Fennell says she’s tried to contact Bennet, Randelman and Kirschner to express her concerns, but none of the three men responded to her questions.

    “The silence is pretty aggressive,” she says. “Something’s up, but I don’t know what it is.”

    Bennet declines to answer a reporter’s list of emailed questions.

    “We are pretty tied up for several weeks due to the election, business schedules, and personal events,” Bennet responds by email. “But, thank you for reaching out and we appreciate our area’s journalists!”

    The SLCF PAC is connected to St. Louis County Family Association, a nonprofit group led by Bennet that has attacked DEI programs across St. Louis County, with a special emphasis on the Kirkwood, Ladue, Mehlville, Rockwood, Lindbergh, Parkway and Webster Groves school districts. The latter three districts were the sites of candidate forums the group sponsored last year.

    The Family Association’s website is a veritable theme park of right-wing culture war issues, with topics including “Gender and Political Indoctrination” and the “Sexualization of Children.”

    Bennet also started the group Tax Fairly, which fought against a 2020 Kirkwood School District bond issue.

    Bennet, in his email, suggested that the RFT review a series of websites his organization has set up dealing with the alleged academic decline in Lindbergh and other school districts and informing parents about “changes to gender.”

    Randelman and Kirschner also declined to answer the RFT’s questions.

    “Thank you for reaching out to me,” wrote Randelman, 45, an IT professional. “At this time I am extremely busy as we are in the last two weeks of the campaign and work. Perhaps we can catch up after the election, if it is still relevant?”

    Kirschner, 62, a retired oil company researcher and former Saint Louis University geology professor, wrote in an email, “I am somewhat surprised that the River Front Times is seeking to write an article so late in the election process…Given my focus on being elected, I will make myself available to you after the election, but not before.”

    The other two Lindbergh School Board candidates — Rachel Braaf Koehler and Megan Vedder — have raised $2,737 and $1,994, respectively. Koehler and Vedder have received endorsements from the Lindbergh branch of the National Education Association. 

    Andrew Tolch, a Lindbergh parent who lives in Randelman’s neighborhood, says it “seems a little sketchy” that Bennet would use a political action committee he had set up to support the school board candidacies “of a different school district from where he’s at. That’s definitely one concern.”

    But Tolch’s primary concern is Bennet’s potential financial stake in the April 2 election’s outcome.

    “If your biggest donor is trying to sell your school district resources,” Tolch says, “we got a conflict of interest there.”

    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • It’s Time for Wash U to Sit Down With University City and Talk About Money

    It’s Time for Wash U to Sit Down With University City and Talk About Money

    I love Washington University. I grew up in University City. When I was a boy, we used to play football behind Francis Field. I took a music theory class there one summer when I was a teen. I’ve attended innumerable Thurtene Carnivals, innumerable readings and lectures and concerts at Graham Chapel. I met my wife, Phoebe, in Holmes Lounge. I did graduate work there. I love that it looks like a university and not a mall.

    When I studied there, my buddies considered me somewhat exotic because I am actually from University City. Sometimes the university doesn’t feel like a neighbor. Sometimes it feels like we are all just carbon-based lifeforms who share a ZIP code.

     

    Author John Samuel Tieman. - COURTESY PHOTO

    COURTESY PHOTO

    Author John Samuel Tieman.

    Washington University owns about 200 properties in University City. They are our largest landowner. They use our streets, parks, police, fire protection and other services. Yet the university pays not a nickel in property taxes. They’re a nonprofit. That tax burden falls upon those who live here.

    Let me be clear. For all our sophistication, we’re just a small Missouri town. Because Wash U is exempted from property taxes, the city loses millions of dollars that would go to schools, infrastructure, services, payroll, and so forth. The university will pay nothing for the city services it uses, while the homeowner will bear that burden.

    University City has studied this problem. There are any number of avenues into the future. Legislation at the state level could force Wash U to pay more. I’m certainly not opposed to that.

    However, I’m not a person who thinks that much gets done by being adversarial and angry. I prefer to advocate for a vision. I want Washington University to become more like Yale, Brown, Heidelberg. I want our neighbor to become a full community partner.

    These other universities have taken on a variety of cooperative projects and agreements. To name just two, there’s the PILOT program, “payment in lieu of taxes.” There are also programs wherein the university takes over, for example, the upkeep of a park. And there are many other options.

    In fairness, Wash U is involved in the community. Take, for example, the Public Art project sponsored by the Municipal Arts and Letters Commission. University students create art that they then display around the city. Now in its fourth decade, this is the oldest cooperative program between a university and its neighboring municipality in the United States. It brought U. City its “Rain Man” and many other sculptures. Students get an audience for their work. This laudable impulse toward cooperation; this is what needs to expand.

    Wash U owns the land on Vernon Avenue, land upon which the new firehouse sits. They rent it to U. City for $1 a year. Wash U did initiate a small payment-in-kind program, a program that didn’t go very far. There are a number of other reimbursement initiatives. Again, this impulse toward cooperation is laudable. But, taken as a whole, these efforts come nowhere near to replacing the lost tax revenue we experience annually.

    I’m a retired teacher. Some time ago, at an international conference, a Japanese educator spoke of his school. He spoke of plans for five years into the future, ten, twenty. I suddenly realized that this guy was talking about plans for fifty years into the future. It’s not very American to think like that, but that doesn’t make it a bad idea. U. City has a comprehensive plan through which we envision our town decades into our future. Washington University could join us in this vision.

    “Town and gown” need not be adversarial. It can describe neighbors. U. City is already embedded in Wash U, and Washington University is already embedded in University City. You can’t walk down a street here and not run into someone who graduated from the place, works there, is an adjunct professor of something or another. We will always be joined, well, not exactly “at the hip” but at about Forest Park Parkway.

    Washington University has a history of visionaries. Edward Doisy and Arthur Holly Compton both won the Nobel Prize. Pulitzer Prize winner Howard Nemerov lived on Yale Avenue. So let this little essay be both a challenge and an invitation.

    Instead of medicine or physics or poetry, let’s envision a neighborhood. Let the prize be a place we all lovingly call home.

    John Samuel Tieman is a widely published poet and essayist. He is an unopposed candidate for the City Council in University City.

    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • Entire Police Department Resigns in North St. Louis County

    Entire Police Department Resigns in North St. Louis County

    The entire police department responsible for the safety of two north county municipalities has resigned, according to a post made this afternoon by the Velda City Police Department.

    That police department only had three officers. But still.

    “Be advised that as of 2 p.m. today (Friday, March 15, 2024), Velda City and Flordell Hills will no longer have police services,” begins the post, which isn’t signed but does go on for 24 more paragraphs chock-full of the very specific type of bad blood and recriminations that seem to go hand in hand with small municipality politics. (Velda City and Flordell Hills have a combined population of about 2,000 people.)

    According to the post, financial hardships forced Velda City to contract their policing to an outside entity. Three separate agencies threw their hat into the ring: Pagedale Police, Hillsdale Police and an unnamed third department.

    Hillsdale’s proposal would have allowed current police personnel to keep their jobs, and that was where things seemed to be headed. Then, the post claims, Velda City Mayor Gwendolyn Buggs “spoke or met in secrecy and conspired” to scuttle the deal – and ultimately she did.

    The three officers comprising the Velda City Police Department subsequently resigned.

    “In closing, residents should know the truth,” the post says. “For the last several months, the department has only had three officers on the street. Not three officers per shift, three officers total for the department that wanted accountability and transparency failed to assume the accountability to properly staff a police department.”

    Whoever posted the message to the police department page says that they assume the St. Louis County Police Department will be handling any calls from Velda City and Flordell Hills.

    However, a St. Louis County Police spokesperson says it will in fact be Pagedale Police handling calls for the two municipalities.


    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • Now You Can Own the Worst Parking Lot in America

    Now You Can Own the Worst Parking Lot in America

    Do you love densely crowded parking lots but hate the convenience of exits? Are you a big fan of seemingly endless rows of cars who also detests pedestrians? Have you ever wished scores of people would angrily curse your very existence on a daily basis? If so you’re in luck, because boy do we have an exciting purchasing opportunity for you.

    The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that the Brentwood Promenade, home to the Worst Parking Lot in America and the historic site of thousands of fender benders and near-misses involving human body and automobile alike, is up for sale. And as anyone who has ever gripped their steering wheel tightly with both hands while screaming at the top of their lungs on its grounds can attest, it’s a purchase that will immediately propel you to the top of the St. Louis zeitgeist among the type of local who would wish death on the owner of a shopping center.

    This thrilling chance to own one of the most nightmarishly labyrinthian and poorly designed parking lots the world has ever known comes via the commercial real estate firm CBRE, which is even willing to throw in a Target and a Trader Joe’s and a few other retail outlets for good measure.

    ​​​​​​​”CBRE is pleased to offer The Promenade at Brentwood, a 337,800 square foot premier Target anchored retail shopping center located in Brentwood, Missouri,” the company writes in its marketing materials. “The Promenade at Brentwood is one of the most dominant shopping centers in the St. Louis MSA, strategically positioned in a strong retail node along S Brentwood Blvd and Service Rd just off Interstates 64 and 170.”

    “Dominant” is the key word here, considering the way the lot effortlessly wrestles all who dare face it into weary submission. “Tyrannical” would have worked too. “Despotic,” even better still.

    There is no dollar amount listed for this important piece of St. Louis history, but we ‘d argue it’s a bargain at any price. And you might even be able to get a deal — nowhere in CBRE’s pitch does it even mention the historical importance of the cursed land it is selling, so it just may be unaware of what it has on its hands.

    If you do decide that you’re the type of person who should own a life-ruining parking lot and the tantalizing shops it uses to lure its unsuspecting prey to its demise, all we ask is that you do us one favor: Burn it all to cinders.

    No matter what else you do for the rest of your life, you’ll die a hero.

    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • Judge Orders House Arrest for Monte Henderson 2 Weeks After Deadly Crash

    Judge Orders House Arrest for Monte Henderson 2 Weeks After Deadly Crash

    The 22-year-old whose apparent reckless driving killed a mother and daughter leaving a Drake concert in downtown St. Louis two weeks ago is allowed to remain free on bond, even as new details emerged about Monte Henderson’s alleged recklessness just prior to the fatal crash.

    At a bond hearing this morning, however, Judge Catherine Anne Dierker did tighten the terms of Henderson’s freedom as he awaits trial, placing him on house arrest.

    Prosecutors said that Henderson had ignored a series of red lights before striking 42-year-old Laticha Bracero and daughter Alyssa Cordova, 21 at North 18th and Olive streets in a horrifying incident captured on video. Henderson has been charged with two counts of manslaughter and armed criminal action.

    Assistant Circuit Attorney Adam Field said that Henderson’s dangerous driving extends beyond a single “incident of recklessness and negligence.”

    He said that traffic camera footage taken on Compton Avenue showed Henderson driving through red lights there prior to the collision, meaning that Henderson’s reckless driving extended 12 blocks at a minimum and covered more than a mile.

    The footage taken of Henderson’s vehicle prior to the collision showed him at another intersection missing a vehicle “by inches.”

    He added that Henderson had been cited three times in the past two years for speeding more than 20 mph over the speed limit.

    Henderson had previously been allowed to remain free with minimal conditions after posting $20,000, and prosecutors were asking Dierker to make the terms of his bond more restrictive.

    Henderson’s attorney TJ Mathis argued on behalf of his client’s bond remaining as is. He said that the 22-year-old Pattonville High graduate had no criminal history beyond traffic tickets. Mathis said that Henderson was supposed to start a new job at a private security company the day after his arrest.

    Ultimately, Dierker agreed with prosecutors and Henderson was placed on house arrest and GPS monitoring. He is allowed to leave home only to appear in court, meet with his lawyer and for doctor’s visits. He also had to surrender his driver’s license and must abstain from drugs and alcohol and have no contact with felons.

    As Henderson left the courthouse, reporters asked him if he had anything to say to the Bracero and Cordova families and if he had any reaction to the video of the collision which was leaked by an unknown individual and has since gone viral.

    Henderson didn’t respond to any of the questions, though the person walking in front of him did.

    “Nothing,” he said.


    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • St. Louis Should Be Very Worried About Tornadoes, New Study Finds

    St. Louis Should Be Very Worried About Tornadoes, New Study Finds

    The Great Cyclone of 1896 killed at least 255 people after tearing through a broad swath of Lafayette Square, Compton Heights and Mill Creek Valley. More than a century later, it’s still the third deadliest tornado in U.S. history.

    But the risk of tornadoes isn’t just in the past, as the twister that hit St. Louis Lambert International Airport in 2011 should have made clear. In fact, a new study finds that St. Louis city and St. Louis County rank in the top 10 most vulnerable areas to tornadoes around the nation — with the city ranking No. 4 and the county No. 10. With temps set to plunge tonight from unseasonably hot to unseasonably cold — perfect tornado weather — we all ought to be very afraid.

    The study comes from Roofgnome.com, which is admittedly a funny name, but the methodology seems to track. Researchers looked at 946 counties around the U.S. assessed by FEMA as having “relatively moderate” to “very high” tornado risk.

    They then examined each county on three different metrics: the frequency of tornadoes, the financial risk (the bigger and more affluent the area, the more it has to lose) and finally “exacerbating factors.”

    In this third category, the study notes, Missouri, Kansas and Illinois stand out: “These states have many older homes and have not adopted current building standards from the International Residential Code and International Building Code. Building codes — like stronger roofs, safe rooms, and impact-resistant windows — help increase structural resilience against extreme weather events.”

    So we’ve got a high risk that another massive twister could sweep through town. We’ve got a high enough population that we have a lot to lose. And then not only do we have a lot of historic homes, but our lawmakers have failed to mandate the kind of building standards that could help keep newer ones safe from a tornado’s mighty power.

    In short, we’re basically sitting ducks.

    See below for the study‘s top 10 most vulnerable counties. And then try not to freak out:

     

    St. Louis Should Be Very Worried About Tornadoes, New Study Finds

     


    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

  • Horrifying Video Shows Downtown Crash That Killed Chicago Mom and Daughter

    Horrifying Video Shows Downtown Crash That Killed Chicago Mom and Daughter

    Newly released surveillance footage shows the horrific crash that killed a mother and daughter leaving a Drake concert in St. Louis on February 13.

    Laticha “Lety” Bracero, 42, and Alyssa Cordova, 21, traveled to the concert from Chicago and were struck and killed by a driver in downtown St. Louis.

    The video, which was published today on X (previously known as Twitter) as well as the Daily Mail, shows a driver police have identified as Monte Henderson, 22, running a red light at excessive speed, T-boning another vehicle, and ramming into the mother and daughter as they were walking on the crosswalk at North 18th and Olive streets.

    The video shows the car speeding even after it struck the two women, dragging them several feet from the crosswalk and leaving metal and plastic debris in its wake from the other vehicle. (Warning: the video is graphic and shows a violent crash that left two people dead. Viewer discretion is advised.)

    It is not clear how the parties who posted the video obtained it. It appears to have been taken from a surveillance camera trained at the street.

    As for Henderson, he posted bond and was released from jail on February 16, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. He is charged with  two counts of involuntary manslaughter for each woman and armed criminal action.

    Bracero and Cordova’s family is asking for help to pay for their funeral, RFT previously reported.

    “Lety was a hard working supervisor at Wintrust bank and a dedicated mother, loving sister, niece/cousin,” Michelle Del Bosque wrote on a GoFundMe campaign for the family. “Her only child Alyssa was going to college and working part time for Starbucks. Alyssa loved music concerts and although was old enough to travel to concerts on her own, her mom would always escort her. The two were inseparable and shared a strong bond.”

    So far the campaign has raised $28,890 towards a $100,000 goal.

     

    Laticha “Lety” Bracero and Alyssa Cordova were killed leaving a Drake concert in downtown St. Louis on Tuesday, February 13. - VIA GOFUNDME

    VIA GOFUNDME

    Laticha “Lety” Bracero and Alyssa Cordova were killed leaving a Drake concert in downtown St. Louis on Tuesday, February 13.

    Subscribe to Riverfront Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple NewsGoogle News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed