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SUNDAY • 04.17.2016 • $2.50 • FINAL EDITION
DENTIST’S PAST RAISES HACKLES License renewed in prison Pediatric dentist Tony Rizzuti served six years on child porn charges but kept credentials
BY ROBERT PATRICK • St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Federal regulators are limited Probation officials refused his request to work at family clinic; lawyer vows a fight
ST. LOUIS • In 2010, Missouri officials renewed the license of a pediatric dentist who was serving a six-year federal prison sentence on a child pornography charge. It would take until 2012 for the Missouri Dental Board to file a complaint seeking discipline against Anthony “Tony” Rizzuti. It was 2014 when the board struck a deal that allowed Rizzuti to keep his license, despite knowing that he had twice been accused of trying to arrange sexual encounters with underage girls.
Hints in Greitens’ far-flung funding National support for gubernatorial race could be precursor to broader goals OUT-OF-STATE SUPPORT Percentage of gubernatorial candidates’ contributions* that came from outside Missouri:
See OFFENDER • Page A12
Greitens • R
63.9%
Total: $5.29m National: $3.38m Lyle Bouck’s unit helped to foil a German incursion in the Battle of the Bulge in World War II. He spent part of his service as a prisoner of war, and decades later was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.
Koster • D
24.5%
Total: $11.62m National: $2.85m Kinder • R
9.0%
Total: $1.46m National: $0.13m Brunner • R
6.8%
Total: $1.62m National: $0.11m Hanaway • R
5.7%
CARING
Total: $2.72m National: $0.15m *Includes itemized donations through March and donations larger than $5,000 since April 1.
for a
HERO
SOURCE: Post-Dispatch analysis of Missouri Ethics Commission data
BY KEVIN MCDERMOTT St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Why would scores of business tycoons from Manhattan to Silicon Valley lavish contributions of $50,000 or $100,000 or even $500,000 on a political novice running in a primary election for governor of a Midwestern state where none of them live? One clue might rest in the Web address “EricGreitensForPresident.com.” Eric Greitens reserved it himself. Seven years ago. Greitens, a Rhodes scholar and former Navy SEAL, is known for bringing high ambition to everySee GREITENS • Page A15
Debt collection vexes patients SSM contracts out its ER service and sells its unpaid bills, raising tax questions BUSINESS • E1
Retelling ‘Pride and Prejudice’ — again • D1
CHRISTIAN GOODEN • cgooden@post-dispatch.com
Nick Miller lifts Lyle Bouck, 92, to his walker during the transfer to a chair in his TV room last month. Bouck cannot support his own weight for more than a few seconds. He likes to watch CNN in the mornings as he eats his breakfast.
“We are bound and determined that he is not going to end up in a nursing home.” — Diane Bouck Simcik, 66, of Colorado, one of Bouck’s four surviving children
BY JESSE BOGAN • St. Louis Post-Dispatch
SUNSET HILLS • Lyle Bouck Jr. grew up tough in south St.
Louis County. So tough that he joined the National Guard at 14 and stayed on as an instructor at the famed Army infantry school in Fort Benning, Ga. He became one of the youngest commissioned officers to serve in World War II. Lots of close calls at the Battle of the Bulge and as a prisoner of war, it seemed nothing could stop him. And nothing has. “I am alive,” Bouck, the recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross, said the other day from his home here.
See HERO • Page A4
Love letter lands couple their dream home • H1 Ortiz: Blues have to get over Game 2 and skate on • C1 Strong bond
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