News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Man dies in KC jail after waiting months for court-ordered mental health treatment
by Clara Bates, Missouri Independent
May 23, 2025
A man who spent months in a Kansas City jail waiting to be transferred to a state psychiatric hospital for court-ordered treatment died on Monday.
Timothy Beckmann was arrested in late September and found incompetent to stand trial due to mental health diagnoses. He was ordered into Department of Mental Health custody in January, joining the list of hundreds of people waiting in jail for a state mental health bed to open up.
Just before 5 p.m. on Monday, 64-year-old Beckmann was found unresponsive in his cell in the Jackson County Detention Center cell, according to the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office.
He was brought to a local hospital, where he was declared dead.
Beckmann hadn’t been convicted of any crimes — his case was on pause while he waited months for mental health treatment.
The cause of death is not yet known. The sheriff’s office, which oversees the jail, told The Independent it is investigating the death and the medical examiner’s office has not yet released a cause of death. The medical examiner’s office told The Independent no reports could be released under public records law while the case is still under investigation.
But in the seven months he spent in pretrial detention, Beckmann’s mental and physical health deteriorated, the public defenders overseeing his case told The Independent on Friday. They say his death is a tragic consequence of the state’s ballooning waitlist for mental health treatment, which leaves people languishing in jail for over a year on average. It’s also an indictment, the public defenders say, of the state’s inadequate support for those with mental illness.
“What happened to Timothy Beckmann is horrific,” said Annie Legomsky, who runs the state public defense system’s holistic defense services program, “and what makes it all the more tragic is that it was entirely preventable.”
She said jails are not equipped to help people with mental illness.
“The inability of our jails to provide appropriate psychiatric care for these individuals is something we’ve been trying to sound the alarm for for a while,” Legomsky said, “and unfortunately, it’s not a surprise that now someone has tragically ended up dying because they weren’t able to get the care they deserved.”
The Missouri Department of Mental Health declined to answer a list of questions, citing patient privacy protections.
Jackson County Sheriff Darryl Forté also declined to answer specific questions, citing patient privacy, but wrote by email that the “death of an individual in our custody is a matter we take with the utmost seriousness and care. We are committed to thoroughly examining all circumstances surrounding such incidents, and this particular case remains under investigation.”
A ‘life or death matter’
Missourians who are arrested and declared incompetent to stand trial wait in jail an average of 14 months before receiving treatment, according to data shared with The Independent earlier this month. Treatment generally includes therapy and medication and is referred to as competency restoration.
There were 418 people on the waitlist earlier this month.
Those being held in jail are sometimes incarcerated for longer than they would be if they’d received the maximum sentence for the crime they were charged with. There have been successful lawsuits in other states arguing the practice violates due process and the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Anthony Vibbard, the deputy district defender in Jackson County who oversaw Beckmann’s case, said Beckmann had been in and out of different mental health facilities over the last few decades.
He was arrested and charged with second degree burglary and first degree property damage, according to court records, after breaking a glass door of a home and entering.
Vibbard said Beckmann had been recently released from a mental health facility when he was arrested, and was left “wandering the streets of Kansas City” — where he wasn’t from and had no family. He said Beckmann entered the home because he was tired and hungry and was looking for something to eat.
Vibbard said once Beckmann was in jail, “his condition started deteriorating to the point where he started self harming.”
Vibbard and Legomsky said after he was detained, Beckmann started pulling out his toenails, scratching himself and “losing touch with reality.” At one point, they said, he stopped eating or taking his blood pressure and heart medication.
The process of getting court orders for mental health examinations and referrals to the Department of Mental Health can take months. In Beckmann’s case, he was finally ordered into the department’s custody Jan. 21, nearly four months after he was arrested.
His attorney “sounded the alarms” in court, Vibbard said, trying to talk to judges, convince the department to expedite his treatment and making records of her concerns. Beckmann came to court “visibly frail,” Vibbard said, with “scabs and wounds on his body.”
The legal team received reports he was being held in restraints, which the sheriff’s office declined to comment on. The jail has been sued in the past for its use of restraint chairs.
“[His attorney] made records over and over saying like that, this is bad. Something bad could happen. He needs to be in a hospital and not a jail,” Vibbard said.“…And eventually we got the word that Mr. Beckmann died number 109 on the waiting list for admissions.”
The department declined to confirm that Beckmann was number 109 on the waitlist at the time he died.
Legomsky said despite legislative and court concerns, more needs to be done to remedy the competency restoration issue, “so that people like Mr. Beckmann don’t die locked up in a cell, strapped down.”
“If people don’t know what’s happening,” she said, “and they don’t realize that it’s a life or death matter, I’m worried that the status quo will continue.”
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.
The post Man dies in KC jail after waiting months for court-ordered mental health treatment appeared first on missouriindependent.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
This article presents a critical view of the state’s handling of mental health care for incarcerated individuals, highlighting systemic failures and tragic consequences. The focus on inadequate mental health services, the emphasis on the human cost, and quotes from public defenders and advocates point toward a socially conscious, reform-minded perspective typical of center-left reporting. While it does not explicitly advocate a partisan agenda, the framing stresses government shortcomings in protecting vulnerable populations and calls for increased accountability and improved care, aligning with center-left concerns about social justice and public health policy.
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Five new Missouri laws to know that become official Thursday
SUMMARY: Starting August 28, 2025, several Missouri laws will take effect, impacting economy, safety, and more. HB 567 ends mandated paid sick leave and halts minimum wage cost-of-living increases. SB 28 eliminates temporary vehicle tags, requiring sales tax payment and issuance of printed plates at purchase. SB 43 criminalizes hazing in universities, limits childhood marriage licenses, and encourages reporting hazing incidents with immunity. SB 82 restricts water exports outside Missouri, requiring permits and oversight to protect resources. SB 133 mandates contacting Missouri 811 before any digging to prevent utility damage. Additional laws address newborn safety, hearing aids, substitute teaching, school participation, cell phone policies, invasive plants, and court interpreters.
The post Five new Missouri laws to know that become official Thursday appeared first on fox2now.com
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
LIVE SOON: Authorities to speak after at least 5 students injured, suspect ‘contained’ in Minneapolis Catholic school shooting
SUMMARY: A shooting at Annunciation Catholic School in Minneapolis injured at least five children, with the suspected shooter contained. The incident occurred during an all-school Mass. Children’s Minnesota and Hennepin Healthcare treated victims, while police reported 20 total victims. Three people, including the shooter, are reported dead. Nearby residents heard several minutes of gunfire. Families gathered at a reunification zone as students were evacuated. Governor Tim Walz and Mayor Jacob Frey condemned the violence, with emergency teams activated. The FBI is involved, sending agents to the scene. The community is shaken, with many expressing fear and sorrow over the tragedy.
Read the full article
The post LIVE SOON: Authorities to speak after at least 5 students injured, suspect 'contained' in Minneapolis Catholic school shooting appeared first on www.ozarksfirst.com
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Missouri becomes first state to repeal capital gains tax, at an estimated $625M cost
by Rudi Keller, Missouri Independent
August 27, 2025
A new Missouri income tax cut exempting profits from the sale of investments officially takes effect Thursday, along with smaller tax changes that will remove sales tax from diapers and feminine hygiene products.
All state laws passed in a regular session take effect Aug. 28 unless another date is specified. The capital gains tax cut will apply to all gains since Jan. 1 and will be reflected in the income tax returns due in April.
With the bill, MIssouri became the first state to exempt profits from the sale of assets such as stocks, real estate, and cryptocurrency from income tax.
“The (Department of Revenue) is already preparing for next year’s tax season and we are making the adjustments required to accommodate this and other new laws that affect taxpayers,” Trish Vincent, the state revenue agency’s director, said in a news release.
The exemption is officially estimated to reduce revenue by approximately $157 million in the current fiscal year and about $111 million annually on an ongoing basis. But the fiscal note, updated June 23 after the bill was passed but before Gov. Mike Kehoe signed it, included a warning that the impact could be much larger.
Missouri taxpayers claimed $13.3 billion in capital gains income for 2022 on their federal income tax forms.
“Therefore, taking the 4.7% top rate would yield ($625.6 million) for FY 2026,” the new fiscal note states.
That is the same estimate The Independent reported in April based on estimates from the Institute for Tax and Economic Policy. The oversight division stated it “does not currently have the resources and/or access to state tax data to produce a thorough independent revenue estimate and is unable to verify the revenue estimates provided by (the Department of Revenue).”
Federal tax changes will further reduce state revenue, and the state is anticipating new costs for programs such as Medicaid funded jointly with the federal government.
Through Monday, general revenue has grown faster than expectations but the trend for the year is not clear. When he signed the budget in June, Kehoe vetoed about $300 million in earmarked items and warned of a looming shortfall.
“The Office of Administration’s Division of Budget and Planning estimates a nearly $1 billion shortfall in general revenue starting in (fiscal year 2027),” the release stated. “Contributing to this shortfall, ongoing general revenue spending authorized in the (fiscal year 2026) budget is projected to outpace ongoing revenues by nearly over $1 billion and grow larger in future years.”
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.
The post Missouri becomes first state to repeal capital gains tax, at an estimated $625M cost appeared first on missouriindependent.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
This content focuses on a Missouri state tax policy that exempts capital gains from income tax, a measure generally favored by fiscally conservative or center-right policymakers who advocate for lower taxes to stimulate investment and economic growth. The reporting is largely factual and includes budgetary concerns and potential revenue shortfalls, providing a balanced overview without strong partisan language. Overall, the tone and content align with a center-right viewpoint, emphasizing tax cuts and fiscal implications common in conservative economic policy discussions.
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