When Jalesia Kuenzel’s twin sons turned 16 last year, she was also thinking of the children that could have been.
Four embryos were created when she and her ex-husband were going through in vitro fertilization. Two became her sons. The other two remain frozen in a storage facility in Pennsylvania.
It’s been nearly a decade since Kuenzel’s divorce led to a legal fight that garnered national attention as she fought for custody of the embryos. She’s now 52, remarried and living in De Soto.
“These are wanted embryos,” Kuenzel said. “These are embryos that have been deliberately created by the parents because they chose to be parents. It’s not something you do by accident.”
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A Missouri court ultimately ruled the embryos were property that couldn’t be used without the consent of both Kuenzel and her ex-husband.
As a result, Kuenzel took to activism. She wants to change Missouri law, and sees the new political landscape, which includes a near total ban on abortion, as an opportunity to jumpstart the conversation.
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Kuenzel opposes abortion, and she appreciates the support she’s received over the years from anti-abortion organizations.
But she doesn’t want her fight to get wrapped up in the issue.
“It’s really about trying to protect these women and some men,” she said, “who wanted their children, their embryos, and still do.”
Last year, Kuenzel reached out to state Rep. Adam Schwadron, a Republican from St. Charles who she met two decades ago at the Creve Coeur Township Republican Organization meetings.
Schwadron agreed to file a bill that would require embryo custody disputes to be decided by a court in favor of the person most likely to create a child from the embryos. Similar legislation has also been filed by state Sen. Karla Eslinger, a Republican from Wasola.
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Both bills would mandate courts to presume the “best interests of the embryo” are to grant custody to the person who “intends to develop the embryo to birth.”
The legislation was first introduced in 2017, when it was passed by a House committee near the end of the legislative session. Its progress stalled after that, and it hasn’t regained momentum in subsequent years.
“I am pro-life and I see a frozen embryo can still become a life,” Schwadron, who is running for Missouri secretary of state, told The Independent. “ … If that life is wanted, it will be loved and it will be nurtured.”
Critics, however, say the idea raises serious concerns over consent and personhood.
The latter remains central to some anti-abortion movement efforts after the constitutional right to abortion was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in June 2022. Personhood was written into Georgia’s abortion ban, where women can now claim a tax exemption on fetuses with a detectable heartbeat. Organizations like the American Society for Reproductive Medicine have warned that personhood laws could criminalize some contraceptives and restrict infertility treatments.
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“I see children coming into being without being wanted by one of their genetic forebearers,” Mary Beck, a law professor at the University of Missouri, said of the Missouri legislation. “Surely no one thinks that’s a good thing.”
A legal battle over embryos
Jalesia Kuenzel, left, testifies to a Missouri House committee in March 2017 (Tim Bommel/Missouri House Communications).
In vitro fertilization was both lengthy and emotionally and financially draining for Kuenzel.
In the U.S., an estimated one in five women of child-bearing years who’ve never birthed experience infertility, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In vitro fertilization can often be a solution, and it’s estimated there are at least one million embryos sitting frozen across the country — and the number is growing.
Embryos are created when two individuals undergo IVF, or the process of fertilizing an egg with sperm outside of the womb. An embryo is created, and typically frozen until the couple wants to implant the embryo in a womb.
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Before they began the process at the fertility clinic, both Kuenzel, whose last name at the time was McQueen, and her then-husband signed paperwork agreeing that in the case of divorce, she would get any remaining embryos, Kuenzel said.
A court would later decide the contract was invalid.
Through IFV, they successfully created four embryos. Two became their twin boys.
When their marriage fell apart, Kuenzel wanted the embryos because she wanted more children. Her ex-husband did not want another child.
The case went to court where Kuenzel won support from anti-abortion groups like the Thomas More Society and Missouri Right to Life.
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A representative of the Thomas More Society at the time argued that embryos were “living beings” rather than property, and as such, legal standards had to be in the embryos’ best interest.
The courts ultimately decided in 2015 that under Missouri law, the embryos were marital property rather than children. Custody of the embryos was awarded jointly to Kuenzel and her ex-husband, meaning they could only be used if both agreed.
‘Force people to procreate’
It’s been nearly a decade since Jalesia Kuenzel’s divorce led to a failed legal fight for custody of two embryos she created with her ex-husband (photo submitted).
Beck, the University of Missouri law professor who has written on the topic of embryo custody, recently assigned her students to read Schwadron and Eslinger’s bills for a class on sex reproduction and the law.
“If cryopreserved, pre-implantation embryos are marital property, then I don’t know how these bills can classify these embryos as having a ‘best interest,’” Beck said.
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The only state to enact such a law is Arizona, which did so in 2017.
Beck said the Arizona law is unconstitutional.
“If you force people to procreate, then you force someone to pay child support,” Beck said. “You essentially give them care and custody of a child that they don’t want to come into existence, so I find it a very troublesome existence.”
She noted Missouri’s legislation would allow for parental rights to be terminated, which would exclude the unwilling participant from paying child support.
Beck fears despite this, such legislation would create a chilling effect, leaving some people second-guessing whether to create embryos in the first place.
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She also sees the legislation as “attempting a backdoor approach to giving personhood to embryos.”
The fight to grant fetal personhood, which would grant legal rights at the point of conception, has picked up steam as the next frontier for the anti-abortion movement.
Rita Gitchell, an attorney who represented the American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists, argued in the friend-of-the-court brief filed in Kuenzel’s lawsuit that life begins at conception and embryos are human beings.
Now she’s arguing the Missouri bills are personhood bills for the same reason. Gitchell told The Independent, “because human beings should have more protected rights than property rights. We’re not fighting over property, we’re fighting over human beings.”
Schwadron said any claim that his bill is an attempt to establish fetal personhood is false because Missouri statute already says life begins at conception.
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But others aren’t so sure.
“What we’re seeing is anti-choice legislators who have run out of things to do,” said Sean Tipton, chief advocacy and policy officer for American Society for Reproductive Medicine.
‘Not alone’: Missourians experiencing infertility say insurance is a major hurdle to care
Tipton said it’s worth noting that the latest re-filing of the bill in Missouri came shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision.
“There are people who have a political interest in equating a fertilized egg in a laboratory with an existing child,” he said. “We think that comparison is invalid scientifically, constitutionally and legally.”
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Ultimately, he said, the decision should be left to the people involved in creating the embryo and no one else.
“It shouldn’t be a judge. It shouldn’t be a politician,” Tipton said. “Those people shouldn’t decide what’s going to happen to the reproductive tissues of the citizens of Missouri.”
To his knowledge, Arizona’s embryo custody law has not yet been challenged in court.
Chani Levertov, the founder of Fruitful, an organization based in Arizona that supports those struggling with infertility, said the new law has not affected the work her organization does.
“We offer support to those navigating infertility and it has never come up,” she said in an email.
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‘Give them a chance to be born’
While her case was playing out in court, Kuenzel created an organization called Embryo Defense. She said she still gets messages from people – mostly women, and mostly older – who ask if they’re crazy for wanting to keep their embryos. Kuenzel tells them they’re not.
Kuenzel brushed aside arguments that the legislation she’s pushing would force some people to become parents.
“That’s the whole reason for doing IVF is to be a parent,” she said. “ … It’s not something you do by accident.”
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In 2016, Kuenzel made frequent appearances in newspapers and on TV stations as she pleaded her case to national audiences. At one point, she said, one of her sons looked at her and said he was glad he was one of the embryos to “get out.”
That off-hand comment comes to mind when she thinks about the embryos sitting in the cryobank in Pennsylvania, she said, which she named Noah and Genesis.
If custody were granted to her tomorrow, Kuenzel said she’d implant the embryos. If she were able to obtain custody after menopause, she said she would donate them to someone trying to grow their family.
“Give them a chance to be born,” Kuenzel said. “That’s my job as a mother. They’re very well wanted and loved by me.”
Missouri senior forward Mark Mitchell was recognized Monday with a second-team selection to the All-Southeastern Conference teams.
Mitchell has led the Tigers all season long and tops the team in scoring (17.9 points per game), rebounding (5.2) and assists (3.6). He would be the just the second player in program to lead all the categories in one season, joining Albert White from the 1998-99 season.
Mitchell is also on pace to become the first player in program history to average at least 17 points, five rebounds and three assists since Anthony Peeler in 1992, the year he took home the Big 8 Conference Player of the Year award.
Mitchell was the only Missouri player to be recognized in SEC postseason awards.
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Five players were named to each of the three All-SEC teams.
Darius Acuff Jr. (Arkansas), Ja’Kobi Gillespie (Tennessee), Thomas Haugh (Florida), Labaron Philon Jr. (Alabama) and Tyler Tanner (Vanderbilt) made the first team.
Acuff was named the conference’s player of the year and freshman of the year.
Joining Mitchell on the second team were Nate Ament (Tennessee), Rueben Chinyelu (Florida), Otega Oweh (Kentucky) and Dailyn Swain (Texas), while Rashaun Agee (Texas A&M), Alex Condon (Florida), Keyshawn Hall (Auburn), Aden Holloway (Alabama) and Josh Hubbard (Mississippi State) were named to the third team.
The All-SEC defensive team consisted of Chinyelu, Somto Cyril (Georgia), Felix Okpara (Tennessee), Billy Richmond III (Arkansas) and Tanner. Chinyelu was selected as the defensive player of the year.
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Appearing on the all-freshman team were Acuff, Amari Allen (Alabama), Ament, Malachi Moreno (Kentucky) and Meleek Thomas (Arkansas).
Swain was selected as the newcomer of the year, while Urban Klavzar of Florida was named the sixth man of the year.
The 2026 Missouri high school basketball state championship brackets continue on Monday, March 9, with eight games in the sectional and quarterfinal round of the higher classifications.
High School On SI has brackets for every classification in the Missouri high school basketball playoffs. The championship games will begin on March 19.
Missouri High School Girls Basketball 2026 Playoff Brackets, Schedule (MSHSAA) – March 9, 2026
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Sectionals
Doniphan vs. Potosi – 03/09, 6:00 PM CT
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St. James vs. St. Francis Borgia – 03/09, 6:00 PM CT
Notre Dame de Sion vs. Oak Grove – 03/09, 6:00 PM CT
Smithville vs. Benton – 03/09, 6:00 PM CT
Cardinal Ritter College Prep vs. Clayton – 03/09, 6:00 PM CT
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Orchard Farm vs. Kirksville – 03/09, 6:00 PM CT
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Boonville vs. Strafford – 03/09, 6:00 PM CT
Reeds Spring vs. Nevada – 03/09, 6:00 PM CT
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Quarterfinals
Festus vs. Lift for Life Academy – 03/13, 6:00 PM CT
Grandview vs. Kearney – 03/13, 6:00 PM CT
MICDS vs. St. Dominic – 03/13, 6:00 PM CT
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Helias vs. Marshfield – 03/13, 6:00 PM CT
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Quarterfinals
Jackson vs. Marquette – 03/13, 6:00 PM CT
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Rock Bridge vs. Staley – 03/13, 6:00 PM CT
Incarnate Word Academy vs. Troy-Buchanan – 03/13, 6:00 PM CT
Kickapoo vs. Lee’s Summit West – 03/13, 6:00 PM CT
Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe’s request to grade public schools on an “A” through “F” scale is pushing House lawmakers to approve legislation some think isn’t quite ready.
With approval and dissent on both sides of the aisle, the House voted a bill to create a new school accountability system through to the Senate 96-53 Thursday despite concerns the letter grades could be a “scarlet letter” for underperforming schools.
“Will this labeling system actually improve schools or will it mostly brand communities, destabilize staffing and incentivize gaming rather than learning?” asked state Rep. Kem Smith, a Democrat from Florissant, during House debate Tuesday morning, March 3.
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She said the key metrics that determine the grade, performance and growth, are volatile.
“The label itself can become a self-fulfilling prophecy,” she said. “The bill doubles down on high stakes metrics that are known to be unstable.”
The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Dane Diehl, a Republican from Butler, told lawmakers that a performance-based school report card with “A” through “F” grades is inevitable. The details, though, are negotiable.
“The governor’s executive order, it is going to happen either way,” he said. “I think we tried to make that process a little better for school districts.”
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Kehoe’s order directs the state’s education department to draw up a plan for the report cards and present it to the State Board of Education. The board could reject the idea, but with a board with primarily new members appointed by Kehoe, lawmakers have accepted the system as fate.
State Rep. Ed Lewis, a Republican from Moberly and chair of the House’s education committee, told the committee in January that he prioritized the bill as a way to give lawmakers influence over the final outcome. He is happy with the edits the committee made, which gives the education department more leeway to determine grade thresholds and removes a provision that would raise expectations once 65% of schools achieve “A” or “B” grades.
The House also approved an amendment March 3 that would grade schools’ environment. This would be based on the rates of student suspension, seclusion and restraint incident rates and satisfaction surveys given to students, parents and teachers.
The Senate’s version, which passed out of its education committee last week, does not include those changes.
“I think (the House bill) is the best product we have in the Capitol right now,” Lewis said. “I am not saying it’s complete, but it is the best we have right now.”
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The changes have softened some skeptics of the legislation, like state Rep. Brad Pollitt.
Pollitt, a Sedalia Republican, said he didn’t support the legislation “for a number of years.” But with the edits, he sees potential for the legislation to usher in changes to the way the state accredits public schools.
The current process, he said, “nobody seems to like,” pointing to widespread concerns with the state’s standardized test.
Some of these changes are already happening quietly. The Department of Elementary and Secondary Education received a grant from the federal government to develop a state assessment based on through-year testing, which would measure student growth throughout the school year, instead of a single summative assessment.
The department is poised to pilot the new test in 14 classrooms this spring, hoping to eventually offer it statewide within a few years. But the estimated startup cost of $2 million is one of many department requests cut from the governor’s proposed budget as the state grapples with declining revenue.
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Creating the “A” through “F” report cards is estimated to cost a similar amount, if not more, according to the state’s fiscal note. The expense is largely frontloaded, going to the programming and technology support required to create the grade cards’ interface.
When The Independent asked Kehoe’s office about the fiscal note, the governor’s communications director Gabby Picard said he would work with “associated agencies” to determine appropriate funding “while remaining mindful of the current budget constraints and maintaining fiscal responsibility.”
The House’s version of the legislation includes an incentive program for high-performing schools, giving bonuses to go toward teacher recruitment and retention, if the legislature appropriates funding for the program.
More: Missouri school board considers using letter grades to score districts
The bill originally proposed incentives of $50-100 per student to subsidize teacher pay. This had large fiscal implications, and Lewis surmised that it would violate a section of the State Constitution prohibiting bonuses for public employees.
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Making the funding optional and directing it to the school’s teacher recruitment and retention fund remedied those concerns. The Senate Education Committee removed the incentive program in its version of the legislation.
The House’s approval Thursday does not stop discussion and possible amendments. Next, the bill will go to the Senate for consideration, and if any changes are made, it will return to the House for more discussion.
This story was first published at missouriindependent.com.