The knock at City Hall came like a thunderclap.
By nightfall, the mayor was in handcuffs—and the town learned he was never legally allowed to hold office at all.
Felony charges, whispered accusations, and broken trust now hang over Coldwater.
As investigators dig into forged affidavits and a fragile “honor system,” one small-town sca… Continues…
Coldwater’s crisis began with a tip and ended with its mayor facing six felony counts.
Investigators say Jose “Joe” Ceballos swore, in black ink on sworn affidavits, that he was a U.S. citizen. In reality,
he was a lawful permanent resident—allowed to live and work in America,
but barred from voting or holding public office under Kansas law.
That quiet legal line, often misunderstood, has now detonated into a full-blown political scandal.
Behind the drama is a deeper vulnerability: a local election system built largely on trust.
Clerks checked addresses and signatures, not passports or naturalization papers.
A familiar face and long community ties were enough—until they weren’t.
Now residents are left to untangle succession rules, question how this slipped through,
and demand reforms that verify candidates before ballots are printed, not after the handcuffs close.