News from the South - Missouri News Feed
SLMPD releases video of suspects in shooting death of teen
SUMMARY: St. Louis police released video of two suspects wanted in connection with the deadly shooting of 15-year-old Dornea Hayes. The incident occurred on May 21st, and police have yet to receive tips or make arrests despite months of investigation. Dornea’s family, who remembers her as smart, beautiful, and outgoing, is seeking justice. They believe the teen’s death, after she left home to meet a friend, remains tied to an unresolved mystery. Her mother and relatives are hoping the released footage will lead to a break in the case, urging anyone with information to contact Crime Stoppers.

The family of Dornea Hayes, 15, remembers her as being smart, outgoing, beautiful, and deeply loved by her family.
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News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Inside this Hannibal Airbnb full of Mark Twain treasures
SUMMARY: In Hannibal, Missouri, a home filled with over 1,200 Mark Twain-themed artifacts invites visitors into the world of the legendary American author. Owned by Paul Krewson, the property serves as a private museum showcasing rare items such as Magic Lantern Slides, a handwritten postcard from Twain, and sculptures by artists like Don Wiegand and Gary Price. Krewson, a distant relative of Twain, shares his collection through short-term rentals, allowing guests to experience the author’s legacy firsthand. The museum features books, photographs, sculptures, and personal artifacts, offering a distinctive look into Twain’s life and works.
The post Inside this Hannibal Airbnb full of Mark Twain treasures appeared first on fox2now.com
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Bill expanding access to hyperbaric oxygen therapy for Missouri veterans heads to governor
by Rebecca Rivas, Missouri Independent
May 6, 2025
Missouri lawmakers passed a bill Monday evening to establish a fund to pay for hyperbaric oxygen therapy for veterans with a traumatic brain injury and facing post-traumatic stress disorder to help prevent suicide and opioid addiction.
With a unanimous 33-0 vote, Missouri senators sent the bill to the governor for his approval.
“It was remarkable to hear the testimonials,” said state Sen. Rick Brattin, a Republican from Harrisonville, during the Monday Senate debate. “And we just want to set this up to where veterans don’t have to go broke to receive a treatment that virtually has zero side effects and only true benefit.”
The House passed the bill, which was sponsored by state Rep. Chris Brown, a Republican from Kansas City, in April with a 156 to 1 vote. Brattin sponsored a companion bill in the Senate.
“The bottom line is, there are too many veterans that are taking their lives,” Brown said during the House debate in April. “They don’t see a way out. They can’t deal with it. And I think the oxygen therapy certainly will help and maybe even is the answer.”
According to the Mayo Clinic, the goal of hyperbaric oxygen therapy is to get more oxygen to tissues damaged by disease, injury or other factors. Patients enter a hyperbaric oxygen therapy chamber, where the air pressure is increased up to three times higher than normal air pressure. The lungs can gather much more oxygen than would be possible breathing pure oxygen at normal air pressure.
The bill directs the Missouri Veterans Commission to compile an annual report with data about the treatment of hyperbaric oxygen therapy and its effectiveness.
Missouri House seeks to improve access to hyperbaric oxygen therapy for veterans
On Monday, Brattin said he and other senators were moved to hear how the treatment offers veterans an alternative to a “giant bag full of prescription drugs that they have to remain on.”
“That’s what we’ve seen with these veteran treatments,” Brattin said. “It’s just basically prescribing a whole bunch of these drugs that have massive side effects and get that veteran potentially addicted or hooked on to these to remain a functioning member of society.”
Dale Lutzen, a retired senior master sergeant from the U.S. Air Force and a legislative advocate for the non-profit TreatNOW, was among those who testified about the treatment during a committee hearing in January. Lutzen said that veterans with traumatic brain injuries or PTSD are typically given prescription drugs that treat symptoms but don’t cure the brain injury.
“As an alternative to drugs, hyperbaric oxygen therapy stimulates brain wound healing and it can reverse soft tissue and neurocognitive damage,” Lutzen said. “This treatment allows patients to experience recovery of cognitive and neurological functioning without surgery or drugs.”
Despite numerous studies that prove its efficacy, he said the treatment is not on Medicare’s approved list and is therefore not covered.
“At its most basic level, (the legislation) gives veterans, who have been diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury or PTSD, the right to receive the treatment as prescribed by a doctor,” he said.
Lutzen has been pushing for the last four years to get the fund established, he said. Last year, the bill passed in the House but stalled in the Senate.
According to the bill’s fiscal analysis, the cost of reimbursing hyperbaric facilities for the necessary treatments could exceed $5 million annually. The funds will come from “any appropriations, gifts, bequests, or public or private donations,” the bill states.
State Sen. Stephen Webber, a Democrat from Columbia, attempted to offer an amendment directing the state to conduct a study on using psilocybin — also known as “magic mushrooms” — to treat depression, substance use or as part end-of-life care among veterans.
The provision comes from a bill Webber sponsored and one that’s been filed for the last three years. In 2023, the House voted overwhelmingly in support of the idea but it never made its way to the Senate for a full vote. This year, Webber’s bill passed out of the Senate Families, Seniors and Health Committee.
However, it was quickly blocked by Republican state Sen. Mike Moon of Ash Grove who said he would rather the bill “go through without any potentially risky amendments that would compromise the effort.”
Seeing the possibility that Moon might “talk on it for a while,” Webber said he’d withdraw his amendment and asked to speak with Moon directly about supporting the psilocybin bill.
Webber added that like Brattin, he was moved by the testimony he heard about the oxygen treatment.
“When you find something like that and there’s something that provides relief for some people,” Webber said, “then it would be a shame not to try to expand access to it.”
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 Bill expanding access to hyperbaric oxygen therapy for Missouri veterans heads to governor 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 presents a largely centrist to center-right perspective, emphasizing bipartisan support for a veterans’ health care initiative in Missouri. It highlights Republican lawmakers sponsoring and advocating for a bill expanding access to hyperbaric oxygen therapy for veterans, a position typically aligned with conservative values of supporting military veterans and seeking alternatives to prescription drug dependency. The inclusion of a Democratic senator’s effort to explore psychedelic therapy for veterans, and the subsequent blocking of that effort by a Republican senator, further underscores a balanced view but with a slight tilt towards conservative caution on novel drug therapies. Overall, the article maintains a factual and respectful tone without extreme partisan language or ideological bias.
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Missouri family, two Oklahoma teens among 8 killed in Franklin County crash
SUMMARY: On Sunday evening near U.S. Highway 169 in Franklin County, a head-on crash killed eight people, including John, Norleen, and Madalyn Elliott, Alexander Ernst, Jaimon and Kyron Gilstrap, Donald Laster, and Wayne Walls. The collision occurred when a GMC Yukon XL attempted to pass a slower car and hit a Subaru Legacy. A 15-year-old is the sole survivor. Authorities closed the highway section for investigation. Tulsa schools mourned the loss of students and staff returning from a basketball tournament, offering condolences and counseling support. The crash remains under investigation. Residents called the highway stretch dangerous.
The post Missouri family, two Oklahoma teens among 8 killed in Franklin County crash appeared first on www.ozarksfirst.com
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