Missouri
University of Missouri student is blind, unable to walk or talk after alleged hazing

A College of Missouri pupil who suffered a critical mind damage after being pressured to drink a bottle of vodka throughout a pledge celebration is again dwelling in Minnesota — however is blind and unable to stroll or talk.
“He has large mind injury. He’s blind. He’s unable to stroll or talk,” household legal professional David Bianchi stated about 19-year-old Daniel Santulli, who’s in his dad and mom’ care, the Columbia Tribune reported.
Santulli, of Eden Prairie, was discovered inside a automobile Oct. 20 at College Hospital, the place his blood-alcohol content material was discovered to be 0.486 % — greater than six occasions the authorized driving restrict.
The coed was resuscitated and positioned on a ventilator after the hazing incident on the Phi Gamma Delta home, the place he was a pledge, in keeping with a February report within the Columbia Missourian.
Bianchi — who has settled a lawsuit in opposition to the fraternity, often known as Fiji, and 22 different defendants — on Monday sought in a court docket movement so as to add fraternity brothers Samuel Gandhi and Alec Wetzler to the lawsuit.
Wetzler was allegedly an organizer of the occasion, in keeping with the possible trigger assertion cited by the information outlet.
“We didn’t learn about them after we filed the unique lawsuit,” Bianchi stated, in keeping with the outlet.
The petition, which Choose Joshua Devine authorised, alleges negligence in opposition to the 2 defendants.
Wetzler allegedly pressured Santulli to drink extreme quantities of booze by placing a tube into his mouth and pouring beer down his throat, in keeping with the lawyer’s grievance.
Gandhi, in the meantime, walked again into Santulli’s room and noticed that he had not moved from the place he had left him, the Columbia Tribune reported on the amended lawsuit.
“At 12:28 a.m., Danny slid partly off of the sofa and ended up along with his face on the ground however he had no voluntary management of his arms or legs and remained there till somebody passing by the room noticed him and put him again on the sofa,” the petition states.
“His pores and skin was pale and his lips had been blue, but nobody known as 911,” it provides, in keeping with the outlet.
Wetzler has reportedly been charged with misdemeanor counts of supplying alcohol to a minor and possession of alcohol by a minor. He’s due in court docket on July 5.
Fraternity member Ryan Delanty despatched a textual content message to a buddy at 10:57 p.m. Oct. 19 in the course of the “pledge father reveal celebration” saying “my son is useless.”
The buddy responded by asking what Delanty did to him.
“I left him,” Delanty, the so-called “pledge dad,” reportedly texted again.
Bianchi stated the fraternity members ought to be charged beneath the state’s hazing statute.
“Missouri’s obtained a superb anti-hazing statute,” he stated, in keeping with the Columbia Tribune.
The decide additionally has authorised the dismissal of a number of defendants sought by Bianchi due to the settlements, the outlet stated.
The nationwide fraternity and college have each suspended the Missouri chapter of Phi Gamma Delta.
“Our ideas and prayers are with Danny and the Santulli household throughout this tough time,” Ron Caudill, the fraternity’s nationwide govt director, advised the Missourian in February.

Missouri
FBI investigating second bank robbery Wedensday afternoon in Kansas City, Missouri

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A robber took money from a bank Wednesday afternoon just south of the Country Club Plaza, not far from a bank robbery less than two hours earlier.
The second robbery happened at 3:36 p.m. at the UMB Bank, 4920 Main St.
Like the first robbery, the suspect handed a bank employee a note demanding money.
He took the money and left the bank on foot. He is still being sought.
No one was injured in the robbery.
The first bank robbery happened at 1:56 p.m. at the US Bank branch, 221 West Gregory Blvd.
According to the FBI, the suspect in the first robbery also handed a bank employee a note demanding money.
The FBI is investigating whether the two robberies were done by the same person.
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If you have any information about a crime, you may contact your local police department directly. But if you want or need to remain anonymous, you should contact the Greater Kansas City Crime Stoppers Tips Hotline by calling 816-474-TIPS (8477), submitting the tip online or through the free mobile app at P3Tips.com. Depending on your tip, Crime Stoppers could offer you a cash reward.
Annual homicide details and data for the Kansas City area are available through the KSHB 41 News Homicide Tracker, which was launched in 2015. Read the KSHB 41 News Mug Shot Policy.
Missouri
Sporting gambling in Missouri: Betting coming to Chiefs tailgates in less than 6 weeks

KSHB 41 reporter Tod Palmer covers sports business and eastern Jackson County. Share your story idea with Tod.
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In less than six weeks, fans will be able to live bet sports from their game-day tailgate or inside GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium during Chiefs games.
Sporting gambling in Missouri: Betting coming to Chiefs tailgates in less than 6 weeks
When Kansas City hosts the Washington Commanders on Monday Night Football next week, it will mark the last home primetime game before legalized sports gambling goes live in Missouri.
“I’ll be thankful, very thankful,” Marcus Burns, a former Chiefs season ticket member, said Tuesday after buying a hat at the team store inside Arrowhead.
He’s among the Chiefs fans who have been forced to go to great lengths to put money on a game as sports gambling became legal in seven of the eight states surrounding Missouri, including Kansas and Illinois, while infighting within the Show-Me State legislature scuttled legalization efforts year after year.
“Normally, friends I go (to games) with are on the Kansas side, so we go over there, pick them up and place our bets,” Burns said. “Then, we come over here.”
If a player is a surprise inactive and you’re already at the tailgate, too bad. That net is locked in there’s no changing it from the Arrowhead parking — at least not until Dec. 1.
“We expect big things out of Missouri sports betting out of the gate,” Christopher Boan, an analyst for BetMissouri.com, said. “This is a market that has been pent up for a long time.”
BetMissouri projects more than $65.6 million in total wagers during the first week sports gambling is legal in Missouri.
The Chiefs host the Houston Texans on Sunday Night Football to cap the week. The Dec. 7 game will air on KSHB 41.
Earlier that day, the Border Showdown between No. 19 Kansas and arch-rival Mizzou takes place at the T-Mobile Center in downtown Kansas City, while the week also features four St. Louis Blues games and a full slate of college football conference championships games.
The NFL playoffs arrive during the second month sports gambling is legal in Missouri followed by the Super Bowl, the Winter Olympics and March Madness, leading BetMissouri to project a total handle of more than $262.6 million in the first four months.
“It’s one of the best sports markets in America, and it’s got a real potential from day one to kind of become one of the upper echelon states sports betting-wise,” Boan said.
Missouri voters narrowly approved Amendment 2 in November 2024, which legalized betting on sports in the state. Sports-gambling revenues are subject to a 10% tax and player props for in-state college athletes are prohibited under Missouri law, though they are legal in neighboring states.
Missouri Gaming Commission Chair Jan Zimmerman is in charge of managing the rollout of sports gambling in the state.
I’ve spoken with Zimmerman, who is also the director of the Kansas City Metropolitan Crime Commission’s SAFE Fund, several times about sports gambling in Missouri during last year’s election and in the months since Amendment 2’s passage.
On Tuesday, I asked her, “If you needed, could you guys go live today?”
Zimmerman laughed: “No, absolutely not. I know everybody would like for us to go live, but we’ve got to make sure we do it right.”
Before the geofencing on apps comes down and sports books open up, the Gaming Commission must finish vetting all prospective employees in the sports-wagering industry, a process that includes Missouri State Highway Patrol background checks among other things.
“Our folks have worked so hard,” Zimmerman said. “I know that they’re anxious to see all their work come to fruition. … Anytime you’re building something from scratch, you’re really invested in seeing it be successful.”
The wait will be over soon.
“It’ll be something different to be able to do that here and stay in Missouri, to go to the local bars and be able to place your bets while you’re there as well,” Burns said.
Missouri’s total handle in the first year is expected to approach $3.88 billion dollars, according to Boan.
“That money has been exiting the state, going to Iowa, going to Kansas, going to Illinois, pretty much going everywhere except Missouri,” Boan said. “You have markets all around you. You know — water, water everywhere, but none to drink.”
Missouri is the only state launching sports gambling in 2025, so the Dec. 1 launch is expected to draw a tremendous amount of attention.
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Missouri
Where national media has Missouri football pinned for postseason

Lost in the shuffle of Saturday’s dramatic double-OT win: Missouri football is bowl eligible.
No. 14/15 Missouri football secured its sixth win of the season and qualified for a postseason berth courtesy of a 23-17, double-overtime win over Auburn on Saturday in Auburn, Alabama.
Mizzou (6-1, 2-1 SEC) has bigger ambitions for the season, all of which are still on the table. MU’s trip to Vanderbilt (6-1, 2-1) this upcoming Saturday in Nashville, Tennessee, was selected as the College GameDay matchup, partly because both teams still have a say in the College Football Playoff and SEC title races.
We know it’s early. Missouri has five games left and a lot can and will change over the upcoming weeks and months.
But the Tigers are bowl eligible, so let’s see what folks are saying.
With five games left to play in the regular season, here is where various national media outlets have Missouri projected to play in the postseason in their updated bowl projections:
ESPN: ReliaQuest Bowl vs. Michigan; Duke’s Mayo Bowl vs. Duke
Neither Kyle Bonagura nor Mark Schlabach of ESPN have Mizzou in the College Football Playoff field, instead opting for Alabama, Georgia, Ole Miss and Texas A&M out of the SEC — popular choices in most projections.
Bonagura, in his updated projections, has tabbed the Tigers for a ReliaQuest Bowl appearance on Dec. 31 in Tampa, Florida, against Michigan — a battle of the Block Ms. Michigan is currently 5-2 with a 3-1 mark in Big Ten play. One of the Wolverines’ losses this year was to Oklahoma.
Schlabach currently projects Mizzou to go to Charlotte, North Carolina, for a Jan. 2 game against Duke in the Duke’s Mayo Bowl. Duke is 4-3, but the Blue Devils have a 3-1 mark in ACC play and absolutely could factor into the conference’s title race.
Missouri has never appeared in either bowl game, but did travel to Tampa for the Gasparilla Bowl in 2022, when it lost to Wake Forest.
CBS Sports: Texas Bowl vs. TCU
Brad Crawford of CBS Sports projected that Missouri will take on TCU on Dec. 27 in the Texas Bowl in Houston.
The Horned Frogs are 5-2 with two losses in Big 12 Conference play, coming against Kansas State and Arizona State.
Mizzou last played in the Texas Bowl in 2017, falling to Texas under then-head coach Barry Odom.
Sports Illustrated: Liberty Bowl vs. Cincinnati
Bryan Fischer of Sports Illustrated has tabbed Missouri for a Jan. 2 game against Cincinnati in Memphis, Tennessee, in the Liberty Bowl. The Gator Bowl is one of the final non-CFP games on the college football calendar.
The Bearcats are ranked No. 21 in the latest US LBM Coaches Poll and shape up as a contender for the Big 12 title. They’re unbeaten through four games in conference play after losing their season-opening game against Nebraska in Kansas City.
The game would take place a day after the final College Football Playoff quarterfinals matchups.
Mizzou last played in the Liberty Bowl in 2018, losing to Oklahoma State.
Pro Football Sports Network: Texas Bowl vs Houston
Pro Football Sports Network’s updated prognostications have Mizzou facing Houston in its hometown in the Texas Bowl.
The Cougars are putting together a strong season under second-year head coach Willie Fritz, who was a longtime coach at Central Missouri in Warrensburg. Houston is currently 6-1, with its lone loss coming against Texas Tech.
Mizzou hasn’t faced the Cougars since 1994.
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