CLAYTON — The Missouri Attorney General is investigating ӣƵ County Executive Sam Page’s use of public money on an April ballot proposition, an attorney hired by Page confirmed Tuesday.

ӣƵ County Executive Sam Page is seen in March 2025.
The investigation centers on the county’s voter outreach on the proposition, according to Page’s attorney, Jeff Jensen.
Public officials and governments are not allowed to use taxpayer money to advocate for or against campaign issues, but Page has said the outreach was only informational.
“I do not see where any laws have been violated,” Jensen said in a statement he read aloud over the telephone. “We will, of course, fully cooperate with the investigation. I hope to meet with the AG’s office soon.
“Dr. Page needs to focus on the business of ӣƵ County,” said Jensen, adding that Page personally is paying for his legal services.
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Missouri Highway Patrol troopers visited Page’s office Monday morning with an order allowing them to take Page’s cellphone, according to a letter from Councilwoman Shalonda Webb to Page dated Monday.
Webb and council Chair Rita Heard Days, both Democrats from north ӣƵ County, had a meeting scheduled at noon Monday with Page, but senior staffers appeared in his place, the letter says. The staffers told Webb and Days that Page was “no longer available” and confirmed the Highway Patrol’s visit.
Webb demanded copies of any search warrant or subpoena served to Page or his office by the Highway Patrol. She also asked Page to tell the council what items he has handed over, or will hand over, as part of the investigation.
The Highway Patrol referred a request for comment to Attorney General Andrew Bailey, a Republican. Bailey’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the investigation into Page, a Democrat.

ӣƵ County Councilwomen Rita Days-Heard, left, and Shalonda Webb talk to the press after ӣƵ County Executive Sam Page State of the County Address on Tuesday, March 11, 2025, at the Touhill Performing Arts Center at the University of Missouri ӣƵ campus.
Though campaigning with taxpayer money is illegal, the county has mounted “educational” campaigns multiple times in recent years, saying the campaigns sought to inform voters. For example, Page and the County Council approved spending $300,000 on a proposed 3% tax on the sale of recreational marijuana in 2023. Sullivan filed a complaint with Bailey’s office then, too.
At issue is a mailer concerning Proposition B on the April ballot, which would have given the county council the power to fire department directors and the county’s top attorney. The mailer was paid for with $36,000 in county funds.
The mailer only listed negative points about the proposition, which councilmembers said was needed to hold county department directors accountable. It also stated that the ӣƵ County Board of Police Commissioners, the ӣƵ County NAACP, the ӣƵ Labor Council AFL-CIO and Greater ӣƵ Inc. opposed the ballot measure, and included a quote from a county circuit court judge’s order calling the proposition’s ballot language “misleading, insufficient, inaccurate, argumentative, prejudicial and unfair.”
Shortly before the April 8 election, Sullivan submitted complaints to the Missouri Secretary of State and the Missouri Ethics Commission. Sullivan said in his complaints that “everything about the flier is clearly designed to influence votes against Proposition B.”
The proposition failed with only 38% of voters supporting it.
By June, the Secretary of State’s office had referred the matter to the ӣƵ County Prosecuting Attorney’s office, which forwarded it to the attorney general, according to Chris King, a spokesman for county Prosecuting Attorney Melissa Price Smith. Because the county controls the prosecuting attorney’s budget, it typically would be viewed as a conflict for Price Smith’s office to investigate Page.
Police are required to obtain search warrants from a judge before officers can confiscate evidence in an investigation. A search warrant related to Page was not publicly available in court records as of Tuesday.
A subpoena is a legal document that requires a person to give testimony, such as in court or before a legislative body. A subpoena also can seek specific records or information.
The County Council has subpoena power. In her letter, Webb wrote that if Page does not provide the requested information, she will ask the council to issue a subpoena seeking materials related to “any investigation.”
The county executive is up for reelection next year. State Sen. Brian Williams, a Democrat from University City whose term ends this year, has said he is “strongly considering” a run against Page in next year’s primary election.
Dana Rieck of the Post-Dispatch contributed to this report.
ӣƵ County executive Sam Page spoke out against Proposition B, saying it was a "power grab" during his State of the County address on March 11, 2025. Video by Allie Schallert, aschallert@post-dispatch.com