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Ozark News

Springfield Man Convicted on Weapons Charge Sentenced to Federal Prison

The man who hosted a December 2018 party that ended with one person dead will be going to federal prison for seven and a half years.

Roy Norey, 39, was convicted in October of being a felon in possession of a firearm. Judge Douglas Harpool sentenced Norey to federal prison during a Thursday hearing.

The conviction, however, is not related to the December 23, 2018 shooting incident that killed Delmarie Bailey, 42, and wounded seven others. Police raided Norey’s apartment on East Montclair after the shooting incident and during the search found a 9mm pistol.

Norey had previous convictions that banned him from owning firearms. He could have been sentenced to 10 years on the possession conviction.

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Ozark News

Boat Fire Saturday at Table Rock Lake

Emergency crews rushed to a boat fire on Table Rock Lake Saturday afternoon near Cape Fair.

The Southern Stone County Fire Protection District said the fire was reported around 4:40 p.m. Saturday and the boat with two occupants was about 300 feet off shore near Point 14 Table Rock Lake/Cape Fair Marina.

The fire had broken out in the engine area of the boat. Crews were able to get the fire out around 5 p.m. and there were no injuries.

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Ozark News

Benton County Sheriff’s Office Investigating Attempted Murder/Suicide

A woman is dead after attempting to kill a man and then killing herself.

The Benton County Sheriff’s Office said they were called about a domestic violence incident on Friday night in Warsaw where shots were fired. When deputies arrived just after 5 p.m., they found that 50-year-old Heather Mathias had shot Charles McCormick twice and then shot herself.

McCormick was flown to an area hospital where he underwent emergency surgery. His condition has not been released to the media.

A child was at the house at the time of the incident and was unharmed.

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Ozark News

Rancho Motel to Remain Homeless Shelter Through Winter

A former motel turned into an emergency shelter to help homeless women and families during the COVID-19 pandemic will be able to continue to help those in need through the winter.

Catholic Charities of Springfield announced they have been given an extension of their agreement with O’Reilly Hospitality Management to continue running the Rancho Motel on East Kearney as a shelter until Spring 2022.

Catholic Charities had been working to get the homeless families and women who were recovering from medical procedures permanent housing because the agreement was initially ending this year. Now, the organization can continue to take in those in need and provide more shelter than previously had been used by the group.

Intake for the facility is handled through the One Door program of Community Partnership of the Ozarks.

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Ozark News

Mercy Makes Preparations for more COVID-19 Patients

Sydney Moran, Ivie Macy, KOLR

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Craig McCoy, the president of Mercy Springfield Communities, explained the hospital’s plans to care for the influx of COVID-19 and other emergent patients.

Mercy Hospitals is using facilities all over Missouri to treat its patients in critical need of care. The healthcare system is still working with CoxHealth to make sure everyone gets the help they need.

Mercy said nursing staff is tight, and Cox is feeling this too. During the last COVID-19 surge, CoxHealth employees were joined by hundreds of traveling nurses and respiratory therapists who were dedicated to caring for COVID-19 patients.

As KOLR-10 reports, since traveling nurses are not needed, Cox only has a small number of people available to help. Mercy said it has agency staffing where it can call on nurses from other markets.

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Ozark News

Missouri State University Celebrates Juneteenth, the New Federal Holiday

Ivie Macy, KOLR

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Juneteenth celebrations are taking place across Springfield to mark the first year the date is recognized as a nation-wide holiday.

As KOLR-10 reports, at Missouri State University (MSU), staff gathered to honor the day the last remaining slaves discovered they had been freed.

This has defined our nation’s history perhaps in ways nothing else much has besides maybe the actual Revolutionary War,” said Doctor Lyle Foster, an assistant professor at MSU. “It’s a story of survival, and I’m very grateful that Juneteenth has now become a national holiday.”

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Missouri News

BILLY LONG: I Will Always Stand Up for the Innocent Unborn

Editorial by: U.S. Rep. Billy Long

The Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision was handed down in 1973. I was a senior in high school. For the life of me, I couldn’t understand how anyone in their right mind could think it was alright and perfectly acceptable to kill an unborn child. I didn’t understand it then and I don’t today. I make no apologies for my pro-life position. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; these immortal words etched into our nation’s founding document, lay out three basic, God-given rights, which all men and women enjoy. No one disputes these rights, except when it comes to innocent babies in their mother’s womb. Life begins at conception. This is not a belief or opinion, but a fact, supported by science. It is a well-known fact that at only six weeks after conception, a fetal heartbeat can be detected. Shortly thereafter, a fetus can feel pain. When you look at an ultrasound, you can clearly see the beginning of human life. 

During my time in Congress, I have continually supported legislation that protects the right to life. Most recently, I supported efforts to bring to the floor a bill preserving this right. The Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act would ban the killing of babies who survive botched abortions, giving them the same rights and protections that every child is entitled to after birth. I am proud not only to be an original cosponsor of this bill but also to be a signee of a discharge petition that would force this bill to be brought to the floor for a vote. Every time this common-sense legislation has come to the floor in either the House or Senate, Democrats have blocked it.

Not only do Democrats not want to protect babies that are born alive, but they also want the federal government to openly fund abortions. For the first time since its inception, the Hyde Amendment has been removed from the president’s budget request. If you are unfamiliar with the Hyde Amendment, it bans any federal funding of abortion, except for instances of rape, incest, or to save the life of the mother. Until very recently, the Hyde Amendment garnered bipartisan support, but not anymore. Throughout his entire political career until his most recent election cycle, President Biden supported the Hyde Amendment and intended to keep it the law of the land. To appease his radical base, then-candidate Biden reversed his position on the Hyde Amendment, compromising his morals by casting aside something he has supported for decades.

Luckily, not all Democrats agree on this point. A few holdouts remain, particularly West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin, who has repeatedly said he would not back ending the Hyde Amendment. Senator Manchin has not given in to the radical left, but President Biden and the majority of Democrats have. To save the Hyde Amendment, more Democrats must stand with Joe Manchin, and not Joe Biden.

You have my word that I will not stop fighting for the innocent unborn. Defending the defenseless I call it. We must pass the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act and must preserve the Hyde amendment. The fact of the matter is that abortion is not health care as many of my Democratic colleagues would argue, it is murder, and the federal government should have no part in funding the mass murder of unborn children. Oh, and by the way, it’s time to defund ‘Planned Murder’ too. 

For more information on my activities in our district and in Washington, I encourage you to follow my Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/Rep.Billy.Long and my Twitter page at https://twitter.com/USRepLong. You can also subscribe to my weekly newsletter, “Long’s Short Report,” by visiting https://longforms.house.gov/newsletter-and-email-updates-form.

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Ozark News

Greene County Commission Approves CARES Funds for Park Board; Springfield City Council Awaits

The Greene County Commission has allotted the remainder of its CARES Act funds to county law enforcement agencies and to the Springfield-Greene County Park Board.

The Commission has allocated just over $434,000 for the Park Board, but the amount will have to be approved by the Springfield City Council will need to approve the funding. The money would be used to reimburse parts of the salaries the park board paid to employees directly impacted by the COVID pandemic.

The park board hired employees for specific COVID positions such as temperature checks at the entrances to park facilities and many existing employees were forced to work extra hours.

The grant money would also be used to reimburse costs for unexpected cleaning items and protective items such as gloves, masks, and cleaning supplies.

The Springfield City Council should vote on the measure at the next meeting on June 28.

ParkBoardFunding

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Ozark News

Bois D’Arc Fire Consumes Home

A fire Friday morning in Bois D’Arc has destroyed a home.

Multiple fire departments were called to the residence in the 12000 block of West State Highway 266 around 7 a.m. Friday morning.

Fire investigators say the fire likely started on the front porch and then consumed the home.

The homeowner escaped unharmed.

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Ozark News

Death of Couple from Battlefield Ruled Murder-Suicide

Greene County authorities say a couple found dead in a burning home in Battlefield in January was the result of a murder-suicide.

Shawna and Don Kipp were found by firefighters at their home on January 27th.

Investigators say Shawna Kipp had been shot eight times.

Don Kipp had a gunshot wound to his head and a gun in his hand.

Fire investigators say the fire started in the master bedroom.