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Missouri’s Republican attorney general is trying to get the medical records of Planned Parenthood patients who’ve had abortions, officials who oversee clinics in Kansas City and St. Louis said in legal filings.
The fight over the subpoenas is playing out in a lawsuit filed last year by Planned Parenthood Great Plains, the abortion provider’s affiliate for Kansas City, and Planned Parenthood Great Rivers, the affiliate for St. Louis. Planned Parenthood officials argue that the state’s restrictions violate an amendment to the Missouri Constitution narrowly approved by voters in November to protect abortion rights.
The Missouri attorney general’s office issued subpoenas starting in late August to two employees of the Kansas City Planned Parenthood affiliate, a physician contracting with it, and two former board members of the St. Louis-area Planned Parenthood affiliate, according to Planned Parenthood court filings last month. One filing seeking to quash the subpoenas said the attorney general demanded patient records, reports on adverse events and communications about patient care, along with clinical protocols, equipment maintenance records, contract documents and records related to compliance with state requirements.
“Despite the Missouri Attorney General’s blatant attempts to overturn the will of the people, all patients expect and have the right for their medical records to be private,” the two affiliates said in a joint statement Tuesday. “Politicians have no place in the exam room with patients and their medical providers.”
Attorney General Catherine Hanaway’s office did not immediately respond to an email Tuesday requesting comment. But in a filing in June, the state questioned Planned Parenthood officials’ repeated statements that “abortion rarely involves medical complications” and that state requirements do not improve patients’ health.
“The purpose of litigation is to ‘ascertain the truth,’” the filing said.
Abortion policy has been in flux nationally since the 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade and allowed states to enforce bans. Twelve states now ban abortion at any stage of pregnancy, with limited exception, and women now are more likely to cross state lines for abortions or to obtain them via pills shipped in by prescribers elsewhere.
A multiyear legal battle has seen Missouri swing back and forth between banning and allowing most abortions. Before last year’s ballot question, the state had a near-total ban.
In July, Jackson County Circuit Court Judge Jerri Zhang, in Kansas City, blocked enforcement of many of the restrictions while the lawsuit proceeds, including licensing requirements and a 72-hour waiting period for abortions.
Planned Parenthood clinics are doing procedural abortions in St. Louis, Kansas City and Columbia, home to the University of Missouri’s main campus. Planned Parenthood Great Plains also has two clinics performing abortions on the Kansas side of the Kansas City metropolitan area.
The Republican-led Legislature wants to return to a ban, with exceptions for pregnancies resulting from rape and incest. It approved a proposed constitutional amendment in May to do that, but the explanation for voters that lawmakers wanted on the ballot in 2026 became tied up in another lawsuit, filed in Cole County Circuit Court the state capital of Jefferson City by a doctor who championed last year’s ballot question.
Cole County Judge Daniel Green ruled last month that summary originally written by lawmakers was unfair and failed to tell voters they would be repealing last year’s measure. He ordered Missouri’s secretary of state to rewrite it.
The revision Green approved Tuesday notes that the new measure would “Repeal Article I, section 36, approved in 2024,” but it doesn’t explain what that entails.
Associated Press journalist David A. Lieb also contributed from Jefferson City, Missouri.
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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(Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Monday to hear Missouri’s bid to revive a Republican-backed law intended to prevent enforcement of several federal gun laws in the state.
The justices turned away Missouri’s appeal of a lower court’s decision that the state law violated language in the U.S. Constitution called the Supremacy Clause that holds that federal laws take precedence over conflicting state laws.
The law, passed by the state’s Republican-controlled legislature and signed by Republican then-Governor Mike Parson in 2021, is called the Second Amendment Preservation Act, referring to the Constitution’s provision enshrining the right “to keep and bear arms.” The law declares that certain federal gun restrictions violate the Second Amendment.
The U.S. Justice Department during Democratic President Joe Biden’s administration filed a lawsuit challenging the law on Supremacy Clause grounds. U.S. District Judge Brian Wimes in 2023 blocked enforcement of the law. His decision was upheld by the St. Louis-based 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2024.
Missouri launched its appeal to the Supreme Court on January 23, three days after Republican Donald Trump returned to the presidency, ushering in an administration supportive of expansive gun rights.
Trump’s Justice Department urged the Supreme Court to decline to hear the case, even though the administration said it has revaluated Missouri’s law and no longer wishes to fully bar its enforcement.
The Missouri law sought to declare that certain federal regulations governing the sale, taxation and possession of firearms would be deemed by Missouri as infringements of the Second Amendment. The law threatened state and local officials with fines of up to $50,000 for knowingly enforcing federal gun laws considered by the state legislature to be Second Amendment violations.
The measure, however, did not make clear the specific federal laws or regulations that the state viewed as invalid. Among the category of federal laws it deemed invalid were any “forbidding the possession, ownership, use or transfer of a firearm, firearm accessory or ammunition by law-abiding citizens,” as well as any “act ordering the confiscation of firearms, firearm accessories or ammunition from law-abiding citizens.” It did not define “law-abiding.”
The Biden administration argued that the measure impeded the U.S. government’s ability to enforce federal law, in violation of the Supremacy Clause. It said the statute caused many Missouri state and local law enforcement agencies to stop voluntarily assisting in the enforcement of federal gun laws or providing investigative assistance.
Wimes, an appointee of Democratic former President Barack Obama, agreed. Missouri appealed, arguing that the state was allowed to withdraw the authority of state officers to enforce federal law, regardless of its reason for doing so. The 8th Circuit upheld the judge’s ruling.
Under Trump, the Justice Department reevaluated the Missouri case and told the justices that while it still views parts of the state law as unconstitutional, some parts “present more difficult questions.”
As a result, while the Justice Department said the Supreme Court should avoid hearing the case, the Trump administration has decided to clear the way for Missouri to ask Wimes to narrow his ruling.
In three major rulings since 2008, the Supreme Court has widened gun rights, including a 2022 decision that declared for the first time that the U.S. Constitution protects an individual’s right to carry a handgun in public for self-defense.
In that ruling, the court set a tough new standard for assessing the constitutionality of gun laws, finding they must be comparable with restrictions traditionally adopted throughout U.S. history in order to comply with the Second Amendment.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Will Dunham)
Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.
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A Missouri man was found dead from a likely bear attack this week, just two days after he sent photos to his family of a bear at his campsite in Arkansas, according to officials.
Police found the 60-year-old man’s body several hundred yards from his campsite near Mt. Judea, Arkansas, on Thursday. The area showed signs of a struggle and had drag marks away from the camp.
The man’s son had asked for a welfare check because his dad hadn’t checked in for a couple of days since sending the photos.
His body has “extensive” injuries “consistent with those expected from a large carnivore attack,” the Newton County Sheriff’s Department said in a release.
ALASKA JOGGER DRAGGED 100 YARDS BY BEAR IN TERRIFYING PREDAWN ATTACK NEAR DRIVEWAY
A Missouri man was found dead from a likely bear attack this week just two days after he sent photos to his family of a bear at his campsite in Arkansas, according to officials. File photo of a brown bear. (Getty Images)
Search efforts were still underway on Saturday to find the bear, which appeared to be a young male, according to the photos sent by the man. Officials said they weren’t sure the bear in the photos was the one that attacked.
“Until the Arkansas Crime Lab completes the autopsy, we can’t 100% say it was a bear, but everything strongly indicates it,” Sheriff Glenn Wheeler said in a statement. “We are attempting to find the bear and dispose of it so the Game and Fish Commission can test it for anything that may have led to the encounter.”
He added, “We know without a doubt that a bear was in camp with our victim and the injuries absolutely are consistent with a bear attack. This is a highly unusual case. We are very early in the investigation and search and will update as we can. If you are in the area, just be aware and use caution, especially with children. History tells us that once a bear becomes predatory, it often continues those behaviors.”

Sam’s Throne Campground has been temporarily closed following the attack. (Google Maps)
The campground, known as Sam’s Throne, has been temporarily closed to the public while the search for the bear continues. Wheeler warned people to be vigilant while enjoying the outdoors: keep food away from where you sleep, don’t approach bears even if they’re small and carry bear spray or some other way to defend yourself.
WOMAN SAVES HUSBAND’S LIFE WITH BEAR SPRAY DURING GRIZZLY ATTACK IN WILDERNESS
“I don’t want this to become open season on any bear that someone may see, as most bears fear humans and run away,” Wheeler added. “But, at the same time, don’t put yourself or others in jeopardy.”
This would be the second bear attack in the state in a month if confirmed.
A 72-year-old Arkansas man was mauled by a black bear in early September. He later died of his injuries.

A Missouri man was found dead from a likely bear attack at his campsite in Arkansas. (iStock)
Before that, the last fatal bear attack in Arkansas was in 1892, according to the Arkansas Times.
“I don’t even know how to put it into words, to tell you the truth. These things just don’t happen,” Keith Stephens, the chief of communications for the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, told the newspaper. “It just seems so bizarre. It’s not even in my realm of comprehension. I’m really in shock today. Actually, when I was told about it, I thought they were kidding me just to give me a hard time from the last one. It’s obviously not a joking matter, but it just didn’t seem real.”
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The bear in the first attack was previously euthanized.
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OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — After years of failed attempts, Republicans in Nebraska have enacted a measure that uses taxpayer dollars to pay for private school tuition, despite voters repealing a newly-passed state law that would fund private school tuition with state dollars.
Republican Gov. Jim Pillen signed an executive order opting the state into a federal school choice tax credit program included in President Donald Trump’s tax and budget bill passed in July.
“I am not opting this in, I am cannonballing it into the state of Nebraska,” Pillen said as he announced the move Monday at Catholic school in Lincoln. He was joined by Republican U.S. Reps. Mike Flood and Adrian Smith, both of Nebraska, who supported the federal budget bill and private school scholarship plan.
The measure is remarkably similar to one the state Legislature passed in 2023 to allow corporations and individuals to divert millions of dollars they owe in state income taxes to nonprofit organizations, which would in turn award that money as private school tuition scholarships. Lawmakers axed the measure the following year after opponents gathered far more signatures than was needed to ask voters to repeal it. The Legislature then passed a new law funding private school scholarships directly from state coffers.
The new federal law that Pillen opted into allows individual taxpayers to direct up to $1,700 in federal income taxes owed to scholarship-granting groups to be used for eligible K-12 private school expenses. But unlike Nebraska’s 2023 proposal, the federal measure allows even high-income households to receive public money for private school costs. Eligibility extends to families earning up to 300% of the area median gross income, according to the Nebraska State Education Association — the state’s largest teachers union.
“Families making more than $200,000 a year are eligible to receive a voucher funded through these tax credits,” NSEA President Tim Royers said.
The private school-funding move in Nebraska highlights the growing tension around the country between the will of voters and their elected representatives. Earlier this year, Nebraska lawmakers were accused of subverting the will of the people by limiting voter-approved paid sick leave. In Missouri, lawmakers have taken steps to repeal voter-approved initiatives on abortion rights and paid sick leave and imposed more requirements on ballot initiative campaigns.
When presented directly to voters, school choice expansion efforts have largely faltered. Nebraska voters in November repealed the school choice law passed earlier that year. A proposed constitutional amendment in Colorado that would have established schoolchildren’s “right to school choice” also was defeated. Kentucky voters rejected a measure to enable public funding for private school attendance.
“Today’s decision by Gov. Pillen undermines the clear will of Nebraska voters, who just rejected state-level vouchers at the ballot box,” Royers said.
Pillen countered that opponents are wrong when they say the publicly-funded private school scholarship scheme will take money away from public schools, saying the federal school choice measure comes “at no cost to the state.”
“We have to have great public schools, and we have to have great St. Teresa’s,” Pillen said Monday. “And because of this legislation, both can win.”
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Score another victory for President Donald Trump in the high-stakes political battle between Republicans and Democrats over congressional redistricting.
GOP Gov. Mike Kehoe of Missouri on Sunday signed into law a new congressional map, Missouri First, that is likely to hand Republicans an additional seat in the U.S. House of Representatives ahead of next year’s midterms elections.
Missouri, once considered a swing state that has dramatically shifted to the right over the past decade and a half, is the latest battleground in the congressional redistricting showdown after the passage of new maps in GOP-dominated Texas and a redistricting push by Democrats in heavily blue California.
“I was proud to officially sign the Missouri First Map into law today ahead of the 2026 midterm election,” Kehoe said in a statement. “We believe this map best represents Missourians, and I appreciate the support and efforts of state legislators, our congressional delegation, and President Trump in getting this map to my desk.”
TRUMP-BACKED REDISTRICTING PUSH TURNS MIDWESTERN STATE INTO NEXT POLITICAL BATTLEGROUND
Republican Gov. Mike Kehoe of Missouri, applauds while delivering the State of the State address Jan. 28, 2025, in Jefferson City, Mo. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson, File)
Trump, in a social media statement following passage in the GOP-dominated state legislature, called the new map “FANTASTIC” and said it “will help send an additional MAGA Republican to Congress in the 2026 Midterm Elections.”
The new map targets longtime Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver’s Kansas City-area district by shifting it eastward to include rural right-leaning voters. The new map would likely flip Cleaver’s seat and give Republicans a 7-1 advantage in the state’s House delegation.
Cleaver has vowed to take legal action if the new map is signed into law by the governor.
“I want to warn all of us that if you fight fire with fire long enough, all you’re going to have left is ashes,” Cleaver said earlier this month as he testified in front of a Missouri Senate committee.

Democratic U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver waits to speak against a proposed congressional redistricting plan at a state Senate committee hearing Friday, Sept. 11, 2025, in Jefferson City, Mo (AP Photo/David A. Lieb)
And pointing to recent public opinion polling, he called the redistricting plan “immensely unpopular.”
And Missouri House Minority Leader Ashley Aune accused Republicans of pushing to “rig our maps and eliminate our representation in Congress.”
ABBOTT CLEARS FINAL REDISTRICTING HURDLE AS TEXAS SENATE PASSES NEW TRUMP-APPROVED MAP
Kehoe’s announcement teeing up the special session came hours after Republican Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas signed into law a redistricting bill passed by the Republican supermajority in the state legislature that aims to create up to five right-leaning congressional districts at the expense of current Democrat-controlled seats in the reliably red state.

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas, seen being interviewed by Fox News Digital, recently signed into law a bill that redraws the Lone Star State’s congressional districts. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News )
The efforts in Missouri and Texas are part of a broad effort by the GOP to pad its razor-thin House majority to keep control of the chamber in the 2026 midterms, when the party in power traditionally faces political headwinds and loses seats.
Trump and his political team are aiming to prevent what happened during his first term in the White House, when Democrats reclaimed the House majority in the 2018 midterm elections.
Democrats are fighting back against the rare, but not unheard-of mid-decade redistricting.
State lawmakers in heavily blue California have approved a special ballot proposition this November to obtain voter approval to temporarily sidetrack the state’s nonpartisan redistricting commission and return the power to draw the congressional maps to the Democrat-dominated legislature.

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom of California speaks during a congressional redistricting event Aug. 14, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP)
The effort in California, which aims to create five more Democratic-leaning congressional districts and counter the shift in Texas, is being spearheaded by two-term Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is seen as a likely 2028 Democratic presidential contender.
With Democrats currently needing just a three-seat pickup in next year’s midterms to win back the House majority, Republicans in Indiana, South Carolina, Florida, Kansas and Nebraska are mulling their own GOP-friendly redistricting plans ahead of the 2026 elections. And right-leaning Ohio is under a court order to draw new maps ahead of the midterms.
Democrats, as they push back, are looking to New York, Illinois and Maryland in the hopes of creating more left-leaning congressional seats.
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In Illinois and Maryland, where governors J.B. Pritzker and Wes Moore are discussing redistricting, Democrats hope to pick up to three more left-leaning seats.
And Democrats could pick up a seat in Republican-dominated Utah, where a judge recently ordered the GOP-controlled legislature to draw new maps after ruling that lawmakers four years ago ignored an independent commission approved by voters to prevent partisan gerrymandering.
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This weekend, Missouri’s Republican governor is expected to sign a controversial new congressional map into law. It’s the latest salvo in a redistricting battle. Nikole Killion reports from Capitol Hill.
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Children explore magnifying glasses at the Downtown Children’s Center in St. Louis. (Rebecca Rivas/Missouri Independent.)
Frustration runs deep for Missouri parents like Libby Eversgerd. Her youngest child has been using a scholarship to attend a small, private school after he “began to resist attending school due to mounting pressure and lack of accommodations for his learning differences.”
It’s not easy to find solutions to complex education problems, but once parents find a solution, losing it is a nightmare.
The Missouri National Education Association (MNEA) lawsuit challenging school choice options could devastate thousands of low-income and special needs families across the state. If the union succeeds, children who rely on scholarships for tuition, learning therapies, or specialized instruction will face the very real possibility of losing access to the educational lifelines that have helped them thrive.
This summer, the MNEA chose courtroom power plays over student needs by targeting a $51 million state investment helping economically disadvantaged and special needs children access high-quality education outside their traditional public schools. By suing to block these funds, the union directly threatens over 7,000 new scholarships slated for this school year, nearly tripling the reach of the program and finally ending years-long waits for children who need help now.
If funding is blocked, families face painful choices: pay tuition out of pocket, drastically cut household spending, or send children (often with complex learning or physical challenges) back into environments that have failed them before. For working parents, school choice is the difference between a child in second grade finally reading confidently or a student losing hard won academic progress. The union’s lawsuit ignores those stakes. Maintaining institutional control, in their view, is more important than the needs of Missouri families.
School choice programs prioritize Missouri’s most vulnerable kids. Families use scholarships not just for private school tuition, but for tutoring, transportation, adaptive technology, and therapies. Blocking those options means denying access to tailored learning environments, sometimes after years of waiting for an opportunity that finally arrived this fall.
More than a legal battle about taxpayer funding, the union’s lawsuit is a direct attack on educational freedom for Missouri’s most vulnerable children and the parents who fight daily for a better life. While union lawyers claim they’re defending constitutional principles, the impact falls squarely on the backs of families: children with reading disabilities or physical needs, single mothers scraping together resources, and parents desperate for one more shot at helping their kids succeed outside the standard system.
Recent national data paints a troubling picture for students, especially those already facing challenges. According to the latest release from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), students are struggling at unprecedented levels. The 2024 “Nation’s Report Card” shows that average scores have declined since 2019 for twelfth graders in mathematics and reading, and for eighth graders in science (these scores were already trending downward even before the COVID shutdowns).
Among high school seniors, the percentage scoring below the basic achievement level in both math and reading has reached the highest point since the assessments began, with nearly half of twelfth graders performing below basic in math and one in three below basic in reading.
These results are sobering, as even federal officials admit, with the largest drops hitting lower performing students hardest and widening the gap between the lowest- and highest-achieving students. Participation in hands-on science learning has also decreased, and absenteeism rates among twelfth graders are up sharply, with nearly a third missing three or more days of school in the previous month.
Against this bleak backdrop, school choice programs are more critical than ever for families failed by the standard system. Fewer than one in four twelfth graders are performing at a proficient level in math, and rates of college readiness in both reading and math have dropped since 2019. For the poorest and most vulnerable (those with disabilities, those qualifying for free lunch), school choice may be the only path to academic growth and confidence.
Though the union claims to act in students’ interests, its actions tell the real story.
The union’s lawsuit would devastate families, removing hope and resources from those who need them most. To block these lifelines now would not just cut off opportunity, but actively worsen the crisis revealed in the Nation’s Report Card. Missouri’s policymakers and courts should heed its dire warnings and do everything in their power to support, not sabotage, direct investments in students most at risk of being left behind. As Missourians, we must unite to secure our kids’ future and shield them from the actions of those who would jeopardize it.
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A Missouri woman was sentenced Tuesday to more than four years in federal prison for scheming to defraud Elvis Presley’s family by trying to auction off his Graceland home and property before a judge halted the brazen foreclosure sale.
U.S. District Judge John T. Fowlkes Jr. sentenced Lisa Jeanine Findley in federal court in Memphis to four years and nine months behind bars, plus an additional three years of probation. Findley, 54, declined to speak on her own behalf during the hearing.
Findley pleaded guilty in February to a charge of mail fraud related to the scheme. She also had been indicted on a charge of aggravated identity theft, but that charge was dropped as part of a plea agreement.
Findley, of Kimberling City, falsely claimed Lisa Marie Presley borrowed $3.8 million from a bogus private lender and had pledged Graceland as collateral for the loan before her death in January 2023, prosecutors said when Findley was charged in August 2024. Findley then threatened to sell Graceland to the highest bidder if Presley’s family didn’t pay a $2.85 million settlement, according to prosecutors.
Findley posed as three different people allegedly involved with the fake lender, fabricated loan documents and published a fraudulent foreclosure notice in a Memphis newspaper announcing the auction of Graceland in May 2024, prosecutors said. A judge stopped the sale after Riley Keough, Lisa Marie’s daughter, sued.
Experts were baffled by the attempt to sell off one of the most storied pieces of real estate in the country using names, emails and documents that were quickly suspected to be phony.
Graceland opened as a museum and tourist attraction in 1982 and draws hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. A large Presley-themed entertainment complex across the street from the museum is owned by Elvis Presley Enterprises. Presley died in August 1977 at the age of 42. Members of the Presley family, including Elvis, Lisa Marie and Benjamin Keough are buried on the property.
The public notice for the foreclosure sale of the 13-acre estate said Promenade Trust, which controls the Graceland museum, owed $3.8 million after failing to repay a 2018 loan. Keough inherited the trust and ownership of the home after her mother’s death.
After the scheme fell apart, Findley tried to make it look like the person responsible was a Nigerian identity thief, prosecutors said. An email sent May 25, 2024, to the AP from the same email as the earlier statement said in Spanish that the foreclosure sale attempt was made by a Nigerian fraud ring that targets old and dead people in the U.S. and uses the internet to steal money.
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Missouri is on track to launch legalized sports betting on December 1, as nine operators have applied for mobile licenses with the Missouri Gaming Commission. Two of those operators, DraftKings and Circa, have already secured un-tethered licenses, allowing them to offer mobile sports betting statewide without affiliation to a casino or sports team. The other seven applicants, including FanDuel, Caesars, bet365, ESPN Bet, BetMGM, Fanatics, and Underdog, are undergoing regulatory review.
Under Missouri’s rules, some operators must form market access partnerships to qualify. FanDuel has partnered with Major League Soccer’s St. Louis CITY SC; BetMGM aligned with Century Casinos; bet365 partnered with the St. Louis Cardinals. Caesars and ESPN Bet are using their connections with Missouri-based casinos to satisfy local access requirements. Fanatics is entering through Boyd Gaming and plans to operate retail sportsbooks at its Ameristar properties in the Kansas City and St. Louis areas. Underdog, currently known for fantasy sports, has not disclosed its market access partner.
Online platforms are expected to handle the bulk of sports betting activity in Missouri. Retail sportsbooks will also be available at casinos, but mobile will likely dominate in terms of wager volume. Applications needed to be postmarked by September 12 to meet the deadline. Those that missed the deadline may be delayed beyond the December 1 launch in going live. Operators such as FanDuel and DraftKings are major players nationally, together accounting for about two-thirds of U.S. sports betting market share. Other entrants like Caesars, BetMGM, ESPN Bet, and Fanatics plan large marketing campaigns ahead of the launch. Circa intends to pursue a more niche strategy, focusing on high-stakes bettors rather than mass-market promotions.
The Missouri ballot measure that legalized sports betting allowed for more operators to enter in the future, though it remains to be seen how many additional companies will apply. Some operators that could potentially enter via existing casino access, such as Bally Bet, have not confirmed plans. Hard Rock and BetRivers, active in nearby Illinois, did not submit applications before the deadline. Missouri sports betting is anticipated to bring access to sportsbooks that already handle over 90 percent of legal sports betting volume in the United States, opening a new market for them and changing the landscape for bettors in the state.
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Hitting the lottery helped one engaged Missouri couple with their big day.
As lottery players across the country wait to find out the winners of the $1.787 billion Powerball jackpot, one person who won some cool cash already cashed in — with plans on how to spend it.
On Sept. 6, a Missourian and Texan managed to match all five numbers plus the red Powerball number to win the nation’s second-largest lottery prize in U.S. history.
While the two main ticketholders have yet to publicly come forward, a secondary winner from the Show Me State claimed his $50,000 prize from the same drawing.
More: Where was the winning Powerball jackpot ticket sold? Will we know who won?
Here’s what we know about the Missouri winner(s) of the $1.787 billion Powerball.
Two tickets sold in Missouri and Texas matched all five numbers plus the Powerball in the Sept. 6 Powerball drawing and will split the $1.787 billion jackpot.
According to the Missouri Lottery, the winning Missouri ticket was sold at a QuikTrip gas station at 12110 Lusher Road in St. Louis.
The other winning ticket was bought at a Big’s convenience store at 11905 E. U.S. Highway 290 in Fredericksburg, Texas, according to the Texas Lottery.
Although it wasn’t the ultimate jackpot prize, a man from Missouri’s Cole County still managed to win $50,000 off a ticket purchased for the Sept. 6 drawing.
It wasn’t until the morning after the draw that he and his fiancée discovered his ticket matched four of the five white-ball numbers drawn, as well as the red Powerball number, according to a news release.
“She was reading them off and my eyes started to light up a little. I didn’t believe I won that much,” the man told the Missouri Lottery. “I took the ticket to two different gas stations to check it. The clerk said, ‘Yeah, man. You won 50 grand!'”
The winner said he plans to use some of his winnings toward their wedding.
The ticket was purchased at a Cenex gas station at 807 Stadium Blvd. in Jefferson City, according to the Missouri Lottery. Two other Missouri Lottery players also won $50,000 in the drawing, but no word yet on if they’ve claimed their prize.
Lottery winners in Missouri can claim their prize while remaining anonymous to the public, in accordance with a 2021 state law. It’s also illegal to publish the names of lottery winners unless said winners provide written consent to the Missouri Lottery.
Jackpot winners have 180 days from the last winning draw date on their ticket to claim their winnings.
As there were two winners this time around, the $1.787 billion prize will be split between them.
The Missouri winner has the option of either an annuitized prize of $893.5 million before taxes or a lump sum payment of $410.3 million before taxes, according to Powerball.
The Texas lottery player chose the cash value and will receive $410.3 million before taxes. Texas players must choose the cash value option or annual payments when they buy tickets, per Texas Lottery policy.
More: Who’s the largest jackpot winner in Missouri history? A look back at previous winners
Missouri Lottery rules state all lottery winnings are subject to federal and state taxes. The state lottery organization is required to withhold 4% in state tax for prizes above $600, along with 24% in federal tax for prizes of more than $5,000. Winners may also owe additional taxes or they may receive a refund depending on their personal income.
In Missouri, retailers receive a $50,000 bonus for selling a winning Powerball jackpot ticket and a $1,000 bonus for selling a Powerball ticket that matches all five white-ball numbers drawn.
According to the Missouri Lottery, the average player is a roughly-48-year-old Caucasian female who’s employed, has graduated high school and has some college experience.
This article originally appeared on USATNetwork: Smaller Missouri winner in Powerball jackpot to use money for wedding
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Who won the $1.787 billion Powerball jackpot?
Lottery fever may be dying down, but the curiosity to find out who holds the golden ticket(s) in Texas and Missouri is alive and well.
Almost one week after the nation’s second-largest lottery prize in U.S. history dominated social media feeds and online news, the respective lottery headquarters in Austin, Texas, and Jefferson City, Missouri, are preparing for the vetting process − pending whether the winners have already come forward. In addition to the $1.787 billion prize, three second-tier Powerball winning tickets were sold in the Lone Star State: A winning ticket worth $2 million was sold in Tyler, Texas, and two tickets worth $1 million each were purchased in Austin, Texas, and Midlothian, Texas.
Who won billion-dollar jackpots for Powerball, Mega Millions? Photos show Publix, Kroger, other stores that sold winning tickets
On Sept. 6, 2025, the Powerball lottery streak that lasted through the summer ended when a pair of tickets matched all five numbers plus the Powerball to win almost $1.8 billion. Below is information about the historic $1.787 billion Powerball − the 13th time in U.S. history a lottery jackpot reached and surpassed $1 billion − who won and the deadline to claim their winnings.
Here’s what we know about the Texas winner(s) of the $1.8 billion Powerball.
Two tickets sold in Texas and Missouri matched all five numbers plus the Powerball in the Sept. 6, 2025, Powerball drawing and will split the $1.787 billion lottery jackpot.
As of Friday, Sept. 12, nearly a week after the historic drawing, no one has come forward from either state to claim the $1.8 billion Powerball prize.
The $1.8 billion Powerball winners from the Saturday, Sept. 6, 2025, Powerball lottery drawing bought their winning ticket at:
Big’s 103 gas station and convenience store, 11905 E. U.S. Highway 290, Fredericksburg, Texas, which is eligible to receive a $250,000 retailer bonus, according to the Texas Lottery
QuikTrip gas station and convenience store, 12110 Lusher Road, St. Louis, Missouri
The winning Powerball numbers for Saturday, Sept. 6, 2025, were 11-23-44-61-62 and the Powerball was 17.
The ticketholders who bought their winning ticket from the Big’s 103 gas station and convenience store in Fredericksburg, Texas, and QuikTrip in St. Louis, Missouri, have two options to choose from for their shared $1.787 billion Powerball prize, according to the Texas Lottery and Missouri Lottery:
receive the $1.787 billion Powerball lottery prize in one lump-sum payment of $410.3 million, before taxes
receive the full amount of $893.5 million in 30 graduated annuity payments, before taxes
Powerball and Mega Millions lottery jackpot winners have 180 days (six months) from the date of the drawing (Sept. 6, 2025) to claim their prize. In this case, the winners have until March 5, 2025, to decide what to do with their share of the $1.787 billion Powerball lottery jackpot, the second-largest in U.S. history. The winners must claim their prizes in person at lottery headquarters − Texas Lottery headquarters in Austin, Texas, and Missouri Lottery headquarters in Jefferson City, Missouri.
Neither ticketholders have come forward almost a week after the $1.8 billion Powerball lottery drawing, but the process to vet a winner takes time, anywhere from weeks to more than a month.
The $1.787 billion Powerball, the second-largest jackpot in U.S. history and the 13th time a Mega Millions or Powerball lottery reached $1 billion, marks the first time the state of Texas made the “billion-dollar lottery prize winners” list. It is the largest prize involving a Texas Lottery player.
According to Texas Lottery rules, the winnings are subject to federal income tax withholding (winnings greater than $5,000). The tax withholding rate is 24% for lottery winnings, less the wager, for prizes greater than $5,000.
Missouri Lottery rules state all lottery winnings are subject to federal and state taxes, and the Missouri Lottery organization is “required to withhold 4% Missouri state tax on prizes of $600.01 or more, along with 24% federal tax for prizes of more than $5,000. Winners may owe additional taxes for the prize or they may receive a refund, depending on personal income.”
The winners of the $1.787 billion Powerball lottery jackpot from Sept. 6, 2025, will receive a one lump-sum payment of $410.3 million, before taxes, or the full amount of $893.5 million in 30 graduated annuity payments, before taxes.
According to a Texas Lottery FAQ post, Texas Lottery draw game players (which include Powerball and Mega Millions) must choose the cash value option or annual payments when they buy tickets. They cannot choose when it’s time to collect the jackpot: “Currently, the choice must be made at the time the ticket is purchased, and cannot be changed. This is a Texas Lottery policy established in response to IRS rulings that impact the way the jackpot is taxed,” texaslottery.com states.
Yes, players may play Texas Lottery draw games (which include Powerball and Mega Millions) as a group, though only one individual or legal entity may claim a jackpot prize.
No. Texas Lottery rules state the lottery will pay only one claimant per ticket, and a “claimant” can be an individual, a trust, a partnership, a corporation, or any other legal entity.
In Texas, Powerball and Mega Millions lottery jackpot winners can remain anonymous, however, where the winning ticket was purchased is public record.
Sangalang is a lead digital producer for USA TODAY Network. Follow her on Twitter or Instagram at @byjensangalang. Support local journalism. Consider subscribing to a Florida newspaper.
This article originally appeared on Treasure Coast Newspapers: Big 103’s in Fredericksburg, Texas, sold $1.8 billion Powerball ticket
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The Missouri House on Tuesday approved a congressional map designed to weaken one of the state’s two Democratic incumbents, intensifying the partisan redistricting battles that are shaping the political landscape ahead of next year’s midterm elections.
The measure, which passed in late August by a 90-to-65 vote, makes Missouri the second Republican-led state to adopt a plan targeting the seats of Black Democratic representatives. The Missouri Democrat most impacted, Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.), said that he will run for re-election. Earlier this summer, Texas Republicans pushed through a map that could put as many as five Democratic lawmakers at risk. Democrats in California have mounted a counteroffensive of their own: last month, the Legislature advanced a proposal to the ballot that would reshape five Republican-held districts.
As the vote was taking place in Missouri, thirteen members of the Congressional Black Caucus, including Rep. Cleaver, spoke emphatically about the state of play for Black elected officials targeted by redistricting. They spoke about what happened in Texas and how they knew that other states would follow. The group was strong in their statements on the current situation. “Texas has more African Americans than any other state in this country right now. Under the proposed maps, they want to make it so that Texas only has two districts in which African Americans have an opportunity to choose their representation. What does that mean for black voices in Texas? That means that it is approximately 1/5 the voting strength of their white Texan neighbors. That is what is going to be, not three-fifths, but we are going to be reduced to 1/5, so my colleagues have laid out a number of things that they believe are going on as to why it is that this is happening. But I’m going to start with number one, Trump himself. He’s racist,” said Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas).
“We will not be silenced. They’ve tried to bury us before, not knowing that we were seeds. We will grow and we will be resilient, just as we have time and time before,” added Crockett. “We are about to experience something that we never thought we’d see in our lifetimes, especially after having experienced what happened at the Edmund Pettus Bridge, which is probably the reason a good many of us in Congress are in Congress. It was at the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Bloody Sunday that John Lewis and a host of other people of goodwill suffered grave, gross, and inhumane injustices… Bloody Sunday is the reason we have the Voting Rights Act of 1965. We would not but for Bloody Sunday,” said Rep. Al Green (D-Texas). “We are going to fight this. We are not going to back down. And I believe that the Voting Rights Act will be upheld and that these maps in Texas will be overturned. But again, Texas is just the beginning. This is a nationwide fight, and it’s bigger than who holds the majority in the House of Representatives. This is about maintaining our democracy and our republic,” Rep. Marc Veasey (D-Texas). When asked by Black Press USA whether or not there is an actual plan to combat what is happening to Black elected officials around the country, several members answered yes. Rep. Veasey added that perhaps there needed to be a special group to deal with the redistricting attacks against Black members at the DNC. The members also relayed that legal strategies are ongoing, and in some cases have been for years, on redistricting.
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Lauren Victoria Burke and NNPA
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Republicans in the Missouri House on Tuesday advanced a new proposed congressional map, part of a mid-decade redistricting push started by President Trump to hold onto – and possibly expand — the GOP’s razor-thin majority in the U.S. House.
The proposed maps aim to make Missouri’s congressional delegation seven Republicans and one Democrat, a change from its current delegation that is made up of six Republicans and two Democrats. The map breaks up the 5th Congressional District, currently held by Democratic Rep. Emmanuel Cleaver, making it more conservative.
Missouri is the third state to consider redrawing its congressional maps. Texas Republicans passed their redistricting effort last month, shifting five Democratic districts toward Republicans. And California Democrats responded by passing their own redistricting plan that would make five GOP-held seats more favorable to Democrats, though the California plan still needs to be approved by voters later this year.
The measure passed Missouri’s state House 90-65, with several Republicans voting against it. It now heads to the state Senate, where Republicans hold a majority.
Mr. Trump applauded Missouri lawmakers in a post on Truth Social, calling the proposed map “much fairer, and improved.”
The president said the map “will give the wonderful people of Missouri the opportunity to elect an additional MAGA Republican in the 2026 Midterm Elections.”
Missouri GOP state Rep. Dirk Deaton said while supporting the bill: “I appreciate the leadership of President Trump as well. I appreciate all of those who’ve spoken out in favor, going back to 2022 and throughout the years, of a congressional map that will better represent Missouri in Washington, D.C.”
Cleaver’s Kansas City district has long been a target for Republicans, as their numbers have grown in Missouri so much that Democrats do not hold any statewide elected office. But state lawmakers left it in place during the 2021 redistricting and instead split Columbia, one of the state’s other Democratic strongholds, into two districts, according to University of Missouri professor Peverill Squire.
The maps are meant to squeeze out another seat for Republicans, but as Squire noted, “none of this comes without any cost.” Mid-decade redistricting is using data that are several years old at that point, and things could have changed along the margins where the districts are being redrawn, making it far from certain that the outcome will be what Republicans want. Further, the legislature is also debating a ballot measure in this special session, the outcome of which could be affected by sentiment over redistricting.
Additionally, the new map will likely be challenged in court, as have similar efforts in Texas and California.
“There’s a lot of risk for the Republicans, and the only thing at the moment that they stand to gain is maybe one more House seat,” Squire said.
Kehoe announced last month that he would be calling a special session to address redistricting, the latest state in a push started this summer in Texas. In mid-July, Mr. Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson asked Texas Republicans to take a look at their congressional map for redistricting. Mr. Trump said he felt that given his margin of victory in Texas, he is “entitled” to five more Republican seats. Texas currently has 25 Republicans and 13 Democrats in its delegation.
Congressional districts are normally settled once every 10 years, after the census shows population shifts. Some states, such as Missouri and Texas, only require the state legislature and the governor to change the districts, but others have more complicated paths for changes to the congressional map, such as independent commissions or requiring voters to give final approval.
In response to these redistricting efforts, the Democratic National Committee is mobilizing support for the state’s Democrats in an attempt to bring national attention to Missouri, the latest epicenter of Mr. Trump’s push for redrawing congressional districts.
The DNC is leading efforts to recruit Missourians to submit public comment during the hearing process and attend a Wednesday rally in front of the Missouri State Capitol building to denounce redistricting efforts. Ohio House Democratic leader Rep. Dani Issacsohn and state Rep. Desiree Tims will be in attendance, given that Mr. Trump has warned the redistricting battle may head to the Buckeye state next.
DNC Chair Ken Martin referred to this latest redistricting battle as an attempt to silence dissatisfied voters.
“Republicans know they’re in trouble,” Ken Martin told CBS News in a statement. “Donald Trump and his party have ripped health care away from working families and jacked up prices on everyday goods in a self-serving plot to make the ultra-wealthy even wealthier.”
Texas’ Republican Gov. Greg Abbott called a 30-day special session to address redistricting and a number of other topics. Two weeks into the special session, Democrats left the state to deny Republicans a quorum — an option not available in Missouri, where only a simple majority is needed for a quorum. They ran out the clock on the special session, but they eventually returned after Abbott called another one, and the measure passed easily.
But they garnered enough national attention that California’s Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom announced that he would redraw his state’s congressional districts to garner up to five seats for Democrats, although California requires the new districts to be approved by voters. Newsom pushed a ballot measure through the Democratic-led Legislature, and it passed easily.
Both Texas and California’s maps are being challenged in court.
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No one in Colorado took home the nearly $1.8 billion Powerball jackpot on Saturday, but seven lucky ticket holders across the state still walked away winners.
The seven large-prize tickets sold in Colorado are worth between $50,000 and $1 million, according to a news release from the Colorado Lottery. The prizes include:
Two Powerball players in Missouri and Texas won the nearly $1.8 billion jackpot during Saturday night’s drawing, ending the lottery game’s three-month drought without a winner. The two winners will split the jackpot.
The winning numbers were 11, 23, 44, 61, and 62, with the Powerball number being 17.
The winning ticket in Texas was sold at a gas station-convenience store in Fredericksburg, according to the Texas Lottery.
The $1.787 billion prize, which was the second-largest U.S. lottery jackpot in history, followed 41 consecutive drawings in which no one matched all six numbers. The last drawing with a jackpot winner happened on May 31.
Powerball’s terrible odds of 1 in 292.2 million are designed to generate big jackpots, with prizes growing as they roll over when no one wins. Lottery officials note that the odds are far better for the game’s many smaller prizes. There are three drawings each week.
The Missouri and Texas winners will have the choice between an annuitized prize of $893.5 million or a lump sum payment of $410.3 million. Both prize options are before taxes. If a winner selects the annuity option, they will receive one immediate payment followed by 29 annual payments that increase by 5% each year. Powerball tickets cost $2, and the game is offered in 45 states plus Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Lauren Penington
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The Powerball lottery saw a ticket bought in Missouri and a ticket sold in Texas match all six numbers Saturday night to win the estimated $1.787 billion Powerball jackpot.
Results revealed a total of 22 new millionaires across 14 states: California, Colorado, Florida, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, Illinois, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Texas and West Virginia.
Grab your tickets and check your numbers. Here are the results for the Saturday, Sept. 6, Powerball jackpot:
Winning tickets were sold in Missouri and Texas, respectively. The winning numbers for Saturday night’s drawing were 11, 23, 44, 61, 62, and the Powerball is 17. The Power Play was 2X.
Powerball, Mega Millions: Want to win the lottery? Here are luckiest numbers, places to play
A ticket bought in Missouri and a ticket sold in Texas matched all six numbers to win Saturday night’s Powerball jackpot.
Single tickets bought in Kansas and Texas each matched all five numbers except for the Powerball and added the Power Play worth $2 million each.
California, Illinois, New York, Ohio and Texas each sold two winning tickets that matched all five numbers except for the Powerball worth $1 million each. States with individual winners included Colorado, Florida, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Oregon and West Virginia.
Double Play numbers are 21, 29, 34, 41, 65, and the Powerball is 17.
Zero tickets matched all six numbers, and no one matched all five numbers except for the Powerball worth $500,000.
Powerball winner? Lock up your ticket and go hide. What to know if you win the jackpot
The Powerball jackpot for Monday, Sept. 8, 2025, resets to $20 million with a cash option of $9.2 million, according to powerball.com.
Powerball numbers you need to know: These most commonly drawn numbers could help you win
Drawings are held three times per week at approximately 10:59 p.m. ET every Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
You only need to match one number in Powerball to win a prize. However, that number must be the Powerball worth $4. Visit powerball.com for the entire prize chart.
Matching two numbers won’t win anything in Powerball unless one of the numbers is the Powerball. A ticket matching one of the five numbers and the Powerball is also worth $4. Visit powerball.com for the entire prize chart.
A single Powerball ticket costs $2. Pay an additional $1 to add the Power Play for a chance to multiply all Powerball winnings except for the jackpot. Players can also add the Double Play for an additional $1 to have a second chance at winning $10 million.
Mega Millions numbers: Anyone win Friday night’s drawing?
Friday’s winning numbers were 6, 14, 36, 58, 62, and the Mega Ball was 24.
The Mega Millions jackpot for Tuesday’s drawing grows to an estimated $358 million with a cash option of $164.5 million after no Mega Millions tickets matched all six numbers to win the jackpot, according to megamillions.com.
Here is the list of 2025 Powerball jackpot wins, according to powerball.com:
Here are the all-time top 10 Powerball jackpots, according to powerball.com:
$2.04 billion — Nov. 7, 2022; California.
$1.787 billion — Sept. 6, 2025; Missouri, Texas.
$1.765 billion — Oct. 11, 2023; California.
$1.586 billion — Jan. 13, 2016; California, Florida, Tennessee.
$1.326 billion — April 6, 2024; Oregon.
$1.08 billion — July 19, 2023; California.
$842 million — Jan. 1, 2024; Michigan.
$768.4 million — March 27, 2019; Wisconsin.
$758.7 million — Aug. 23, 2017; Massachusetts.
$754.6 million — Feb. 6, 2023; Washington.
Powerball numbers: Anyone win Wednesday night’s drawing?
Here are the nation’s all-time top 10 Powerball and Mega Millions jackpots, according to powerball.com:
$2.04 billion, Powerball — Nov. 7, 2022; California.
$1.787 billion, Powerball — Sept. 6, 2025; Missouri, Texas.
$1.765 billion, Powerball — Oct. 11, 2023; California.
$1.586 billion, Powerball — Jan. 13, 2016; California, Florida, Tennessee.
$1.58 million, Mega Millions — Aug. 8, 2023; Florida.
$1.537 billion, Mega Millions — Oct. 23, 2018; South Carolina.
$1.35 billion, Mega Millions — Jan. 13, 2023; Maine.
$1.337 billion, Mega Millions — July 29, 2022; Illinois.
$1.326 billion, Powerball — April 6, 2024; Oregon
$1.22 billion, Mega Millions — Dec. 27, 2024; California.
Chris Sims is a digital content producer at Midwest Connect Gannett. Follow him on Twitter: @ChrisFSims.
This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Did anyone win Powerball? Winners match Powerball numbers in Missouri, Texas
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On Election Day last November, supporters of reproductive rights in Missouri were quietly hopeful. For more than two years, abortion had been all but illegal in the state, owing to a trigger law that went into effect minutes after the Supreme Court issued its Dobbs v. Jackson decision, overturning Roe v. Wade. Only in the case of a medical emergency could a woman get an abortion of a viable fetus, and anyone who provided an abortion under other circumstances would be guilty of a felony. But for months opponents of the law had been campaigning to pass Amendment 3, which would enshrine in the state constitution one’s right “to make decisions about reproductive health care” without government interference. They drew inspiration from neighboring Kansas, which, despite its G.O.P. leanings, had voted by eighteen points to preserve abortion rights, and from a half-dozen other states, including Kentucky and Ohio, which had followed suit.
Then again, Missouri was one of the most conservative states to put abortion rights to an electoral test since Dobbs. The last time a Democratic Presidential candidate had won Missouri was in 1996, and, this time, Donald Trump was certain to defeat Kamala Harris and lead a Republican sweep of statewide offices. Josh Hawley, the state’s senior U.S. senator, was insisting, against all evidence, that Amendment 3 wasn’t about abortion but, rather, about providing gender-affirming care to minors. He falsely called it “an effort to come into our schools, behind your backs, without your knowledge, to tell our kids that there’s something wrong with them and to give them drugs that will sterilize them for life.”
Deborah Haller, a retired nurse, who spent nine years running the public-health department in rural Johnson County, about an hour east of Kansas City, knew that thousands of women were crossing the border into Illinois and Kansas to end their pregnancies, and that many others were securing abortion pills through telemedicine. Missouri’s restrictions were “unconscionable,” Haller told me. On Election Night, she was thrilled when 51.6 per cent of the state’s voters said yes to Amendment 3, but she soon said to her husband, “I wonder how long it’ll be before they knock it down.” Relating their conversation to me, she said, “It didn’t take long.”
Less than twenty-four hours after the polls closed, Missouri’s two Planned Parenthood clinics filed suit, asking a court to honor the result and lift medically unnecessary abortion regulations that were on the books in the state, including a seventy-two-hour waiting period, a ban on providing abortion medication through telemedicine appointments, mandatory pelvic exams, and a requirement that clinics be licensed as ambulatory surgical centers. The limitations, in effect since 2018, had left Missouri with just one abortion clinic in the years before Dobbs. Sure enough, attorneys for the Republican-led state government objected, saying that the regulations must be enforced to protect patients.
It was not until February that a Kansas City judge temporarily struck most state regulations targeted at abortion providers, even as she allowed several others to remain, such as the condition that clinics fulfill the standards for ambulatory surgical centers. Three Planned Parenthood clinics began administering abortion care, but the government appealed, and the state Supreme Court halted abortions in May. The case has gone back and forth, with the judge ruling anew in July that surgical abortions can take place, for now at least, and the state, again, filing an appeal. The office of Missouri’s secretary of state has issued a rule that effectively blocks clinics from providing medication abortions, which account for nearly two-thirds of abortions nationwide. Upping the pressure, the state’s attorney general, Andrew Bailey, sued Planned Parenthood on July 23rd, calling the organization a “death factory.” (He has since been named the co-deputy director of the F.B.I.) Most troubling to abortion-rights proponents: Republicans in the Missouri legislature decided to place a new constitutional amendment on next year’s ballot which would severely restrict abortion all over again. In passing the measure, Republican legislators said that voters must not have understood what was in Amendment 3, or it surely would have been defeated.
Missouri is not the only state where anti-abortion activists have countered post-Dobbs gains on abortion rights. In Ohio, despite a 2023 referendum that prohibits the state from “burdening, prohibiting, penalizing, and interfering with access to abortion” before viability, challenges to abortion rights are working their way through the courts. Even states with significant abortion bans are witnessing intensifying attempts to make reproductive care more challenging to obtain. Texas and Louisiana, for example, are targeting a New York doctor for allegedly violating state laws when she prescribed abortion pills to patients in their states. Louisiana passed a law last year that classifies mifepristone and misoprostol as controlled substances, potentially delaying lifesaving treatment for pregnant women and making it more difficult for them to manage miscarriages. (The law is being challenged in court; legislators in states such as Missouri have introduced similar legislation.) Candace Gibson, the director of state policy at the pro-choice Guttmacher Institute, called the prospect of such legislation “Terrifying.” She added, “Unfortunately, what type of care you can access really depends on where you live.”
When I went to see Selina Sandoval, an ob-gyn at the Kansas City Planned Parenthood, the clinic was offering abortions for just the second time since the July ruling. Sandoval explained that, amid the shifting landscape, she is updated promptly by the organization’s attorney when new information comes in. “Even as someone who’s doing this care every day, it is so hard to follow what’s going on,” she told me between appointments. (She also sees patients across the state line in Kansas.)
The on-again, off-again access to abortions in Missouri has made it difficult for Planned Parenthood clinics to prepare for the periods when abortion has been allowed. They can’t always train and assign staff in an instant, or easily schedule doctors or spread the word that they’re open for business. The uncertainty is “really disruptive to care, which obviously is the goal,” Sandoval said. Emily Wales, the president and C.E.O. of Planned Parenthood Great Plains, which includes central and western Missouri, noted that, for years, clinics have told patients that their care may be interrupted. “We had appointments available,” she said, “but we would tell people as they booked them, ‘We have a license renewal coming up,’ or ‘We have an injunction in place that has a hearing, so let’s go ahead and create a backup plan.’ ”
Of ten available appointments on the day I visited, only seven were filled in advance. I spoke with one patient, a twenty-eight-year-old medical assistant and mother of four young children. She had assumed that she would have to travel for treatment, as a friend had, and had been startled to discover that she could get an appointment in Kansas City. If she’d had to travel for an abortion, “it would have caused chaos in my life,” she told me. “It would have been a struggle to have to take off work, and then, on top, it’s just already overwhelming.”
Angela Huntington spends her workdays, and many of her off-hours, creating what she calls a “soft landing” for abortion patients from Missouri and beyond. Based in Columbia, two hours east of Kansas City, Huntington is part of a network of patient “navigators” who buy plane tickets, send rideshare gift cards, reimburse hotel and child-care costs, and arrange payments for abortions that patients otherwise could not afford. In 2024, a hundred and fifty-five thousand people crossed state lines for abortions. “There’s so much meaning to what I do.” Huntington told me. “I don’t know if I could do anything else.” On the day we met, she was working with an unhoused woman who lived thirty-five miles from the nearest airport. The woman had never flown, and she was stopped by airport security because she did not have a Real I.D. or a home address that matched her proof of identification. “It’s a mess,” Huntington said.
One woman’s effort to get an abortion spanned five states. A nurse and mother of five girls in a small town in southern Missouri, she was delighted when she found out, earlier this year, that she was pregnant with a boy. Testing, however, soon revealed trisomy 18, a genetic abnormality that is usually fatal, often before birth. Few infants born with the condition live more than a year, and their short lives are marred by feeding and breathing difficulties and other forms of distress. The woman learned that her unborn son—whom she and her husband had named Mychael—had a particularly severe case. “We went to all the appointments. We did all the ultrasounds,” she told me. “Beyond a miracle happening, there was no way we were delivering a healthy child free of pain.”
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Peter Slevin
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