Chattanooga Times Free Press

Missouri House expels lawmaker accused of abusing his children

- BY SUMMER BALLENTINE

COLUMBIA, Mo. — The Missouri House on Wednesday ousted a lawmaker accused of sexually and physically abusing his children years ago.

The Republican-led House voted almost unanimousl­y to kick out Rick Roeber, a Republican from Lee’s Summit who was elected in November to represent his suburban Kansas City district.

Nobody voted against his ouster, though one lawmaker voted “present” to sidestep taking a position.

Roeber’s expulsion followed a House Ethics Committee investigat­ion into claims made by his now-adult children that he sexually abused two of them at the ages of 5 and 9.

The committee found their allegation­s credible.

“It is unacceptab­le what he has done to the home life of these children,” GOP House Speaker Rob Vescovo said during an emotional speech from the chamber floor. “And I find him in the worst capacity to represent the people, and more specifical­ly represent the children, of the 34th District or the children of the state of Missouri.”

Roeber didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. He previously told the committee that he didn’t sexually abuse his children.

Several of Roeber’s children testified to House investigat­ors this year that he also frequently beat them with a belt, choked them and once drowned a litter of puppies.

One child who said Roeber was sexually abusive told investigat­ors that “to have someone that you are trusting as your parent to treat you in that manner and to not treat you like a child … takes away your innocence.”

The committee found records showing that his children reported the abuse around the time it allegedly occurred in the 1990s, but the Jackson County prosecutor’s office didn’t file charges. Mike Mansur, a spokesman for the prosecutor’s office, said records from the time show that the office didn’t file charges because there was insufficie­nt evidence, but that it is reviewing documents provided by the Missouri House.

State Rep. Robert Sauls, a Democrat from Independen­ce who served on the Ethics Committee, said: “The state of Missouri has failed these children, and I will not sit back and let the state of Missouri continue to fail them.”

Roeber tried to resign last week after the Missouri Independen­t first reported that House leaders went to the Jackson County prosecutor with concerns that Roeber currently has weekend visitation­s with a child.

Roeber didn’t mention any of the allegation­s against him in his resignatio­n letter, saying he planned to move out of state to be closer to family.

But the House refused to let him resign, which allowed the Ethics Committee to complete its report and recommend that he be publicly expelled.

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Rick Roeber

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