May 16, 2012

Attorney General, Dept. of Ag shut down another puppy mill

The Attorney General’s Office and Department of Agriculture have seized more than 100 dogs from an unlicensed puppy breeder in South Central Missouri.

Koster Doolittle Kennels.jpg Attorney General Chris Koster says the dogs in the illegal kennel in the Rolla area were lacking water, were sick, and living in what he calls horrendous conditions.

Koster teamed up with Department of Agriculture officials and the Humane Society in St. Louis to have the dogs impounded. There will be a court hearing in the next few weeks, Koster says, and hopefully, after that they can be moved to safety.

Koster says since Operation Bark Alert went into effect about six months ago, more than 2,500 dogs have been seized by the state.

Koster says Missouri has a bad reputation for being the puppy mill capital of the U.S. and that he’s working with Agriculture director Jon Hagler on several initiatives to clean up the system.

The dogs were taken from Doolittle Kennels, an unlicensed dog-breeding kennel owned by Tim King. The Sheriff’s Department aided in the rescue.

Koster began going after puppy mill owners when he served as Cass County Prosecutor, saying shutting down such operations was a priority then and continues to be a priority as Attorney General, where he can make a difference statewide, he says.

Koster urges the public to visit www.BarkAlert.mo.gov to report unlicensed breeders. 

Jessica Machetta interviews Chris Koster [Download/listen MP3]
Jessica Machetta reports [Download/listen Mp3]

Mizzou basketball releases impressive TV schedule

While this weekend’s football game against Furman is on pay-per-view, this upcoming basketball season should afford you many opportunities to get the Missouri Tigers on television. 

Mizzou Basketball released its complete 2009-10 television schedule on Wednesday and the it’s possible all 33 of its games will be televised. Mizzou has a school record 14 regular-season games appearing on national TV, while 15 games(including two exhibitions games) will appear on the Mizzou Sports Network. Four games will be televised by the Big 12 Network.

Missouri television schedule .

In other Mizzou news,  ESPN’s Fran Fraschilla released his list of the Top 10 Defenders in college basketball on Wednesday and he named Missouri’s J.T. Tiller his Top "Pest" in his ESPN blog.  "J.T. Tiller has made his reputation on the defensive of the floor for the Tigers, but it doesn’t stop there," Fraschilla said. "He’s one of the best guards in the Big 12 and is one of its fiercest competitors."

Royals reign of terror ends over Tigers

The Royals five game winning streak over Detroit came to an end.  The Royals had a 3-0 lead, but let it slip away as the Tigers won 4-3.  Starter Lenny DiNardo made hi second start and took the loss.

Despite two defensive miscues by third basemen Alex Gordon, DiNardo got out of the first inning and the Royals went ahead, 3-0, in the fourth against Tigers starter Eddie Bonine on a walk, Alberto Callaspo’s double, Miguel Olivo’s RBI single and Gordon’s sacrifice fly.

In the bottom of the fourth, the Tigers scored twice against DiNardo after Callaspo’s attempt for a double-play relay was low, and first baseman Billy Butler couldn’t come up with it.

DiNardo was done after the sixth when the Tigers took a 4-3 lead. Curtis Granderson’s single, Gerald Laird’s double and Adam Everett’s single tied the score. Jamey Wright relieved DiNardo and gave up an RBI single to Placido Polanco.

Dome key dooms financial accountability measure

Democrats stand by their governor and prevent Republicans from overturning Governor Nixon’s veto of a bill that would increase financial accountability as well as give state legislators the key to the Capitol dome.

Sponsor Jason Smith, a Republican from Salem, made the motion and pressed for a vote. HB 544 passed the Senate 33-to-0 during the regular session. It passed the House 143-10. But Democrats, not wanting to embarrass their governor, switch sides during the Veto Session and vote "No". With that, support drops to 86-to-71, well short of the two-thirds majority needed.

Rep. Jason Kander, a Democrat from Kansas City, argued during House floor debate Wednesday that the accountability measures in the bill are already in place.

"We already have this. It’s a duplicative committee. We don’t need it. It’s not fiscal responsibility," Kander told colleagues. "This is an excuse the throw the word ‘fiscal responsibility’ around. Fiscal responsibility is what’s come out of the actions the governor has actually taken."

Smith argued that the additional financial accountability measures were needed The bill would have expanded the Missouri Accountability Portal to require the governor’s office to give a daily account of the budget appropriations being withheld. It also would have created the Joint Committee on Recovery, Accountability and Transparency to oversee the spending of federal economic stimulus money. Missouri is receiving $4 billion from the $787 billion dollar economic stimulus package approved by Congress earlier this year.

Smith told colleagues that it’s too hard for citizens to track how the state is spending the stimulus money it has received.

"For the last few days, I’ve been trying to figure out how much stimulus money the state’s political subdivisions are getting that’s bypassing the legislative body and no one can give me a number," Smith countered. "That’s why we need oversight."

Democrats didn’t just argue that the financial accountability measures had been passed in other legislation or fell within the authority of other committees. They also latched on to a provision the Senate added to the bill: an amendment that would have given all 197 state legislators a key to the Capitol Dome.

In his veto statement , Gov. Nixon, a Democrat, singled out the key issue, stating it could "pose potential harm to legislators, their constituents and our historic capitol building."

Nixon stated that the Capitol Police expressed serious concerns with that requirement.

"My concern is not with the legislators who would receive these keys, but simply with the increased access to more than a hundred additional keys which could be stolen and misplaced. The concerns of those responsible for the safety and security of our capitol building and its occupants and visitors are very serious and range from the inaccessibility of the capitol dome area in the event of a medical emergency to the potential for security threats," the governor said in his veto message.

Smith argued in vain during House floor debate that the key exchange wouldn’t pose the security risks the governor feared. Smith got no support from Democrats and his motion failed.

Other objections were made during House floor debate on Wednesday. State representatives who made those motions withdrew them after having their say. The legislature didn’t override any of the 23 vetoes the governor issued this year or restore any of the budget cuts he made in line-item vetoes of 11 budget bills.

Download/listen Brent Martin reports (1:15 MP3)

19th ranked Truman VB drops MIAA opener

The 19 th -ranked Truman volleyball team opened with a quick 1-0 lead against No. 3 Emporia State on Wednesday night, but a veteran ESU squad battled back to take a 3-1 (23-25, -17, -15, -20) decision to kick off MIAA play in Kirksville. Freshman middle blocker Megan Sharpe had a team-high 16 kills and hit .520 for the Bulldogs. 

The Bulldogs (9-4, 0-1 MIAA) jumped out to a fast start, building up an eight-point lead at 21-13 in the first set. The Hornets turned in a 10-3 run to cut the Bulldog lead to just one at 24-23, but junior outside Allison Barker pounded one of her ten kills on the night to end the first set and put the purple and white ahead early.

From there, however, the 3 rd -ranked Hornets (11-0, 1-0 MIAA) went to senior outside hitter Arica Shepard often, as she finished the night with a match-high 20 kills to go with a .472 hitting percentage. Truman struggled to shut down Hornet rallies in the second and third frames, as the Bulldogs hit just .132 in the second set before being held to an .044 mark in the third – allowing the Hornets to pull ahead, 2-1, in the match.

The teams traded leads throughout the fourth set, but an 8-2 run for the visitors after a time-out with the score tied at 13 apiece did in the ‘Dogs – who managed to get to within three at 23-20 before a Shepard kill and a set error by Truman ended the match.

In addition to Sharpe’s 16 kills, Barker also finished with a double-double for the Bulldogs by picking up 14 digs to go with her ten kills. Junior setter Ashley Petak had a team-high 25 assists, while junior libero Casey Bruno recorded a match-high 18 digs.

For Emporia, Shepard led all players with 23.5 points (20 kills, 2.5 blocks and one ace) while adding 11 digs for a double-double. Brianne Boner and Brittney Miller each put down 10 kills for the Hornets, who hit .246 as a team.

Truman will hit the road for three straight MIAA contests, starting with a trip deep into Kansas with matches at No. 6 Washburn (Friday; 7 pm) and Fort Hays State (Saturday; 4 pm) this weekend. The Bulldogs will return home the following weekend to host Missouri Southern on Friday, Sept. 25.