01/14/2026 - JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.
According to a report released today by State Auditor
Scott Fitzpatrick, officials in Mississippi County have a long list of changes
to implement in order to make their county government more efficient and
effective. The audit gives the county an overall rating of "fair"
while finding residents of Mississippi County have been overtaxed by
approximately $172,000 since 2016 and identifying significant areas that need
to be addressed in the offices of the Prosecuting Attorney and Sheriff, as well
as with the County Clerk and County Commission.
"The lack of essential controls and procedures in
some county offices creates risk that theft or misuse of funds could occur and
go undetected. When you see a Prosecuting Attorney's Office that takes years to
make restitution payments to some victims, a Sheriff's Office that has no
system to track seized weapons and drug paraphernalia, and a County Clerk whose
miscalculation led to the county assessing approximately $172,000 in excess
property taxes, it is clear there are significant issues in almost every office
of the county government, and officials collectively need to make a commitment
to improving the way the county operates," said Auditor Fitzpatrick.
"I commend county officials for taking our recommendations seriously and committing
to implement changes that will make governmental operations in Mississippi
County more accountable and transparent."
The audit found lacking controls and procedures in the
Prosecuting Attorney's Office including a failure to segregate duties and to
perform adequate supervisory review of detailed accounting and bank records.
The Prosecuting Attorney has entrusted the Legal Secretary to perform the duties of receiving,
recording, depositing, and disbursing money without providing adequate review,
which increases the risk of loss, theft, or misuse of funds. Additionally,
office personnel do not prepare adequate bank reconciliations or maintain a
book balance, nor do they prepare monthly lists of liabilities to reconcile to
the available balance. The office's failure to
deposit receipts timely has resulted in some victims waiting for years to
receive their restitution payments.
A review of the Sheriff's Office found a similar lack
of proper controls and procedures including a failure to adequately segregate
accounting duties. The Administrative Director performs the duties of receiving, recording, depositing,
and disbursing money, and reconciling
the bank account without adequate oversight from the Sheriff. Additionally, the
Administrative Director does not prepare a bank reconciliation, maintain a monthly
list of liabilities or outstanding items for the Sheriff's commissary account,
and does not maintain a cumulative book balance in the accounting records. The
report also found personnel do not maintain a seized property inventory listing
or any other overall organizational system to track seized property, and do not
conduct periodic physical inventories of seized property. The report notes adequate
internal controls are essential and would significantly reduce the risk of
loss, theft, or misuse of the property.
Another finding in the report
identifies how the County Clerk failed to accurately calculate the property tax
reduction amounts or retain sales tax rollback calculations for 2023 and prior
years. As a result, the county has assessed approximately $172,000 in excess
property taxes since 2016. Additionally, the County Clerk did not prepare and
the County Commission did not approve budget amendments for 9 funds until after
actual expenditures exceeded budgeted amounts. Actual expenditures exceeded
budgeted amounts by approximately $290,000.
Other findings in the report
include the county violating the Missouri Constitution by paying the County Clerk an additional $18,500 annually, the
Mississippi County Senate Bill 40 Board paying $3,000 in Christmas bonuses to
an employee in violation of the Missouri Constitution, a failure by the
Mississippi County Commission to consistently comply with the Sunshine Law, the
Public Administrator failing to always file annual settlements or status
reports timely, the Recorder of Deeds performing monthly bank reconciliations
that do not reconcile to the bank balance, and the County Assessor failing to establish proper procedures for receipting and
transmitting money.
The complete audit report is available here.