エピソード

  • Civic Outlaws: Who Runs Missouri? ATC Power, Acting Leadership & the Torch Enforcement Controversy
    2026/06/05

    Civic Outlaws – Question Authority. Demand Accountability. Defend Liberty.

    Due to a technical glitch, the first few minutes of today's broadcast apparently exercised their constitutional right to remain silent. Unfortunately, that missing segment contained the setup for the entire discussion.

    The show began by examining a simple question: Who should be making public policy in Missouri?

    Samuel opens with concerns regarding the continuing use of an Acting Supervisor at Missouri Alcohol & Tobacco Control and asks whether major policy decisions should be driven by officials who have never completed the full appointment and confirmation process envisioned by Missouri law.

    From there, the discussion turns to:

    • Missouri ATC leadership and accountability • Administrative agencies versus elected government • Catherine Hannaway and Kristen Templeton • Torch Electronics and gaming-machine enforcement • Unequal and selective enforcement concerns • Convenience stores, liquor license holders, and regulatory pressure • Judicial review and agency interpretation of statutes • Loper Bright and limits on administrative power • Sunshine Law transparency issues • MOLAG and licensing advocacy

    At its core, this episode asks whether agencies should enforce policy—or create it.

    Visit: CivicOutlaws.com MOLAG.org

    Question Authority. Demand Accountability. Defend Liberty.

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    1 時間 17 分
  • Missouri’s Licensing State: ATC Power Grabs, Gaming Machine Raids, Hanaway’s Crackdown, and Jefferson City Fails Businesses Again
    2026/05/16

    On today’s Civic Outlaws, Samuel Trapp examines Missouri’s final day of legislative session and the state’s continuing failure to resolve gaming-machine regulation. The episode targets ATC overreach, Catherine Hanaway’s gaming crackdown, liquor-license pressure, HB3154/SB1407 fingerprint authority, cannabis rescheduling complications, and the broader problem of agencies using uncertainty as power. Samuel also discusses Sunshine Law strategy, MOLAG, and why Missouri businesses deserve clear statutes, not enforcement by press release, advisory letter, or bureaucratic intimidation.

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    1 時間 30 分
  • Gaming Machines, Liquor Licenses, and MOLAG: Civic Outlaws Introduces a New Shield for Missouri Operators Facing Regulatory Pressure
    2026/05/01

    Civic Outlaws turns its attention to Missouri’s gaming-machine and liquor-license landscape, introducing MOLAG — the Missouri Licensing Advocacy Group — as a new organized response for operators, licensees, and business owners facing regulatory pressure. This episode explains why small businesses need coordination, information, advocacy, and protection before agencies define the battlefield for them. Civic Outlaws airs live every Friday from 7:00 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. at damradio.com/live.

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    1 時間 30 分
  • Statewide Surveillance or Public Safety? Missouri Flock Cameras, Norfolk Appeal, and the Fight Over Warrantless Vehicle Tracking Systems
    2026/04/24

    Today on Civic Outlaws, Samuel Trapp breaks down the controversial Flock camera surveillance system through the lens of the Schmidt v. Norfolk case now on appeal. From Supreme Court precedent in Carpenter to the broader implications of statewide ALPR networks, the discussion shifts to Missouri’s own Department of Public Safety funding programs and what they may be building behind the scenes. With real-world examples, including the Camden County controversy, this episode launches a transparency campaign aimed at uncovering who controls these systems, where they are located, and how they are used.

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    1 時間 21 分
  • Missouri’s New Licensing Trap: ATC, Torch, and the Bureaucratic Shortcut Around Proof
    2026/04/17

    In today’s Civic Outlaws, Samuel Trapp digs into what he argues is a dangerous shift in Missouri: the replacement of courtroom proof with administrative punishment. Using the Torch litigation, ATC enforcement tactics, and Missouri’s new affidavit-based compliance framework, the program examines how regulators can pressure businesses, threaten liquor licenses, and impose consequences without ever proving a criminal violation in court. The episode also introduces MOLAG, the Missouri Licensing Advocacy Group, as a response to mounting licensing overreach affecting gaming, alcohol, and other regulated industries across the state.

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    1 時間 29 分
  • Missouri Legal Chaos: Federal Judge Declares Torch Illegal While State Courts Refuse—Who will stand?
    2026/04/10

    Missouri’s legal system is sending mixed signals—and businesses are paying the price. In this Civic Outlaws episode, Samuel Trapp breaks down the federal ruling targeting Torch gaming machines, the refusal of Missouri courts to decide their legality, and the growing enforcement actions across the state. With agencies issuing advisory opinions, prosecutors acting inconsistently, and a federal judge stepping in after initially abstaining, the question becomes clear: who actually decides what is legal in Missouri? This episode explores the deeper issue—process, power, and the dangerous no man's land between regulation and overreach.

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    1 時間 28 分
  • Who Really Gets to Decide? Torch Machines, Missouri ATC Overreach, VLT Confusion, and Bureaucratic Power Plays
    2026/04/10

    The April 3 episode of Civic Outlaws, Samuel Trapp takes on one of the messiest fights now unfolding in Missouri: the collision between ATC enforcement, Missouri Gaming Commission positions, local prosecutors, the Attorney General’s office, Torch machines, and the broader fight over so-called VLT or “no chance” devices.

    The program opens with a blunt defense of liberty and non-interference. Leave people alone. Stay in your lane. That simple principle becomes the thread running through the whole episode. From there, Samuel ties together several weeks of discussion about Alcohol and Tobacco Control, arguing that bureaucratic agencies keep reaching beyond their proper statutory role and acting as if they can effectively decide criminal questions without the clean authority to do it.

    The heart of the episode is the Torch/TNT litigation and the confusion created by conflicting legal and political signals. Samuel walks through how a federal judge first declined to issue declaratory relief on the legality of Torch devices under Missouri law, emphasizing comity, state interests, and the idea that Missouri courts should resolve Missouri criminal-law questions. Later, that same case produced a ruling declaring certain Torch devices to be illegal gambling devices when operated outside a licensed casino. That reversal, and the way it is now being used, becomes central to the critique.

    This episode digs into: • Missouri ATC overreach and bootstrapping criminal-law concepts into licensing enforcement • The difference between regulation, advisory opinions, and actual judicial determinations • The legal confusion around Torch machines and video lottery terminal-style devices • Cole County and appellate court refusals to provide early declaratory clarity • Selective or uneven enforcement across counties and against specific operators • Whether federal courts should be effectively deciding unsettled questions of Missouri criminal law in a private business dispute • The practical fallout for truck stops, convenience stores, lodges, vendors, and small operators across the state • Why Samuel argues that Missouri legislators need to stop punting and define the field clearly

    Samuel also connects the VLT fight to the broader Civic Outlaws theme: the danger of letting bureaucracy become its own source of law. When agencies, commissions, and politically motivated enforcers start acting like they get to define what counts as “lewd,” what counts as “illegal,” and who gets targeted first, the result is not clarity. It is confusion, pressure, selective enforcement, and power grabs dressed up as administration.

    The episode also touches on the developing role of the Missouri Licensee Protection Association and the need for a stronger middle layer to help license holders, small businesses, and operators defend themselves against arbitrary or inconsistent government action.

    If you care about Missouri law, administrative overreach, gambling-device litigation, selective enforcement, due process, licensing issues, or the broader fight over who actually governs in this state, this episode is for you.

    Civic Outlaws Government transparency, legal process, free expression, and the fight against bureaucratic overreach.

    Website: civicoutlaws.com Podcast: civicoutlaws.com/podcast Contact: samuelt@civicoutlaws.com

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    1 時間 19 分
  • Missouri Transparency Under Fire: Sunshine Law Abuse, ATC Power Expansion, and the Growing Cost of Government Accountability
    2026/03/27

    Missouri officials promise transparency—but deliver silence, inflated fees, and bureaucratic resistance. In this episode, Civic Outlaws exposes how Sunshine Law requests are being weaponized through outrageous costs and delays, while agencies quietly push for expanded enforcement powers. From unanswered letters to the governor to a staggering $300,000 records estimate, the pattern is clear: less visibility, more control. We break down the contradictions between federal free speech protections and state-level secrecy, and why accountability is becoming harder—and more expensive—than ever.

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    1 時間 30 分