Uizu Voters weigh question from Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools district at polls
KANSAS CITY, Mo. 鈥?A Kansas City, Missouri, woman faces charges in connection to the alleged stealing of nearly $26,000 worth of candles from the Bath and Body Works store on the Country Club Plaza.Over the weekend, Jackson County prosecutors charged Destiny Moore, 25, with one count of felony stealing of more than $25,000 worth of goods.According to court documents filed in support of the charges, Moore allegedly stole roughly 1,000 candles between April 28 and Sept. 21, 2024, from the store, located at 4705 Broadway Blvd. in KCMO.While Moore was conducting the alleged thefts, she was simultaneously going through a court case in Jackson County in which she was charged with felony stealing of more than $750 worth of goods.Court documents in that case revealed Moore stole 52 items worth nearly $1,500 in 2019 from a Victorias Secret store at 860 NW Blue Parkway.Moore pleaded guilty to the charges on
stanley bottles Sept. 12, 2024. A judge sentenced Moore to two years of supervised probation.Moore allegedly told police detectives investigating the 2019 crimes that she would sell the stolen goods on Facebook Marketplace or on the street for half of the stic
stanley website ker
stanley termoska price.As of Monday, Sept. 23, Moore was Vtip 1 dead in Wednesday night shooting in east Kansas City
KANSAS CITY, Mo. 鈥?A Johnson County, Kansas, District Court judge has sided with the Shawnee Mission
stanley termos School District regarding its masking policies after tw
stanley cups uk o parents sued the district, citing psychological harm and objecting to the policy itself.In a ruling
stanley sverige filed Thursday, District Court Judge David Hauber said the children of one parent named in the suit, Kristin Butler, were given exemptions from the districts mask mandate. However, because they were distanced under CDC protocols from other masked children, she contends that they suffered psychological harm and ended up wearing masks so they would fit in, Hauber wrote.The second parent, Scott Bozarth, according to Haubers ruling, did not seek an exemption because of ostracism concerns if his child did not wear a mask. Butler and Bozarth filed their petition on May 28 鈥?after the school year had ended. Thus, it is apparent the plaintiffs offer a Catch-22 dilemma that can only be resolved by abolition of any mask policy, Hauber wrote.Bozarth, according to Haubers ruling, made it clear the issue at hand was the masking policy itself rather than just the effects of granting exemptions or the need for social distancing. In the i