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Candidates for attorney general

Wednesday, October 1, 2008 4:23 AM CDT
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Michael Gibbons

Occupation

Missouri Senate president pro tem,

5th District; practices law at Stinson, Morrison, Hecker in St. Louis

Education

Bachelor of Arts from Westminster College in 1981; Juris Doctorate from St. Louis University School of Law in 1984

Previous offices held

Elected to Kirkwood City Council in 1986; Missouri House of Representatives, 1992-2000; Missouri Senate, 2000-present

Internet crime

Internet crime is a dangerous frontier that would get its deserved attention if he was elected, Gibbons said at a candidate debate on the University of Missouri-Columbia campus on Sept. 11. Gibbons said, “People are using the Internet as a weapon.” He pledged to implement a cyber crimes task force in the attorney general’s office to assist areas in the state that did not already benefit from regional task forces because they could not afford one.

Drug enforcement

Meth busts in Missouri are the highest in the nation, which shows the state is struggling with a large problem, he said. Gibbons would implement an electronic log system that would prevent people from purchasing pseudophedrine, a needed ingredient for meth, at multiple stores.

Chris Koster

Occupation

Missouri Senate, 31st District;

practices law with the Law Firm

of Tim Dollar in Kansas City

Education

Liberal arts degree from the University of Missouri-Columbia; law degree from Missouri’s School of Law; master’s in business administration from Washington University-St. Louis

Previous offices held

Prosecuting attorney of Cass County, 1994-2004; Missouri Senate, 2004-present

Experience

Koster leaned on his law enforcement experience most at a candidate debate on the University of Missouri-Columbia campus on Sept. 11. Koster touted his 10 years as prosecuting attorney of Cass County and as an assistant attorney general for two years before that. “I’ve been out of school for 16 years, and I’ve carried a badge for 12 of those years,” he said.

Drug enforcement

In February, Koster introduced Senate Bill 1063, which would created the

Missouri Methamphetamine Project. He said the project calls for “high impact” advertisements against use of the drug, like those made famous in

Montana. The project would also increase minimum sentences for meth manufacturers.

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