Trending Topics

St. Louis and city official sue Missouri over the state’s control of local police

The city alleges that the new law violates a provision of the Missouri Constitution that prohibits unfunded mandates from the state

St. Louis

The Gateway arch towers over the St. Louis skyline on a dreary,rainy day, Thursday, Feb. 24, 2011 in St. Louis. The city of St. Louis lost nearly 29,000 people during the past decade, a decline of about 8 percent of its population.(AP Photo/Tom Gannam)

Tom Gannam/AP

Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — The city of St. Louis and the leader of its city council filed a federal lawsuit Monday against a new Missouri law putting a state-appointed board back in control of the local police department, putting St. Louis among a handful of major U.S. cities that don’t fully oversee law enforcement.

The president of the city’s Board of Aldermen, Megan Green, argues in the lawsuit that the new law violates her rights to free expression, freedom of assembly and to petition state government, all guaranteed by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The city says the law violates a provision of the Missouri Constitution that prohibits unfunded mandates from the state.

The law, approved by the GOP-controlled Legislature and signed by Gov. Mike Kehoe last month, gives the governor the power to appoint four city residents as voting members of a new board to manage the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department to serve along with the city’s elected mayor, currently Democrat Tishaura Jones. The police department of Kansas City, Missouri, is overseen by such a board.

The lawsuit alleges that the new law violates Green’s rights through vague and overly broad provisions that prohibit city officials from taking any action to “impede, obstruct or interfere” with the state board, subjecting them to fines and removal from office. The new law also requires St. Louis to increase its spending on the police department each year through 2028.

Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey is promising to defend the law.

“Rather than waste taxpayer funds in an attempt to defund the police, we would encourage city leaders to focus their efforts on building a safer St. Louis,” James Lawson, a deputy chief of staff for Bailey, said in an email to The Associated Press.

St. Louis first lost full control over its police department during the Civil War in 1861, when Missouri was sharply divided between Union and Confederate supporters. St. Louis and Kansas City had larger Black populations than other parts of the state and were centers of Union support. A pro-Confederate government persuaded the Legislature to give the state control of the local police.

That control lasted until a statewide vote in 2012 decisively approved an amendment to the state constitution to allow St. Louis to take control of the police department. However, Republicans argued this year that it was necessary to return control to the state to restore order in the city following years of population loss, a rise in homicides, and power struggles between city leaders and GOP state officials.

Trending
On April 7, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed Senate Bill 364, which allows people with work authorization from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services to serve as LEOs
From checking Social Security records to updating retirement plans, here’s a step-by-step checklist for maximizing your benefits
The suspect told police he would have beaten Gov. Josh Shapiro with a sledgehammer if he found him
Detective Bryan Van Brunt died in 2019 after suffering “profound PTSD” related to his undercover work; six years later, he was honored on the PD’s memorial wall in a special ceremony