Disclaimer: All facts gleaned from the filings stated hereafter are only as truthful as the petitioner. The tone of this article expresses a style of writing historically employed by America’s greatest writers and, as such, is for opinion purposes only. No intentional harm is due. Do not read if the topic of divorce (even your own) causes you emotional distress. Continue at your own risk.
The marriage of Stacey and Jason McGraw began in May 2014, registered in Warren County, Missouri, and carried the familiar cadence of shared years until the seams finally gave way in late July 2025. By Stacey’s account, the separation was clear and final, a quiet but decisive break that ended more than a decade together. Less than a month later, she took her story to the Eleventh Judicial Circuit Court in St. Charles County, filing a sworn petition for dissolution on August 20, 2025.
Her petition, prepared and filed through attorney Andrew Roth Pynn of Boehmer Law, LLC, outlines the facts with deliberate starkness. There were no children born of the marriage. Neither she nor Jason is in the Armed Forces. Both are employed, self-supporting, and capable of carrying the weight of their own attorney’s fees. Stacey asks the court to acknowledge these realities by denying maintenance to either spouse and requiring each to manage their own legal costs.
The remaining questions, as presented in her filing, revolve around dividing what they built together — the marital property, the separate assets, and the debts accumulated along the way. Stacey seeks an equitable division, not an uneven one, a recognition that even in dissolution, fairness matters.
Her sworn statement, sealed by a notary in St. Charles County, reads like the closing chapter of a story that once held promise but has since exhausted its chances. The court’s role now is not to repair but to formalize an ending already lived.
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