
Aug. 20, 2025
Minor Marriage: A Major Problem for States
This year, Missouri joined the (surprisingly short) list of fifteen states to completely ban child marriage. This legislation marks an update from the 2018 amendments to Missouri law, which allowed children between sixteen and eighteen years old to marry with parental consent. Prior to 2018, many considered Missouri a “destination” state for child marriage, with individuals coming from both coasts to marry fifteen-year-old girls. This Note explores the history and attitudes behind child marriage and the fairly recent wave of states to adopt full child marriage bans while also considering the implications of child marriage on parental rights, especially for divorced parents.

Aug. 19, 2025
Paved with Good Intentions: Missouri’s Prosecutor-Initiated Relief Statute and the Perils of Criminal Justice Innovation
The road to hell is paved with good intentions, especially when it comes to criminal justice reform. Section 547.031 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri allows circuit attorneys to file motions vacating convictions based on innocence evidence—an ambitious reform that In re Circuit Attorney, 22nd Judicial Circuit ex rel. Christopher Dunn reveals as fundamentally flawed. This Note argues that Missouri’s prosecutor-initiated relief statute creates more problems than it solves, resulting in a framework that is more complex, less efficient, and potentially less effective than the traditional post-conviction mechanisms it was meant to supplement.