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.
Picture a marriage unraveling not with a bang but a bureaucratic whimper—Benjamin Acheampong, self-employed and Missouri-rooted, filed to dissolve his union with Kia Koko McDonald in Jackson County’s Circuit Court, Missouri, the petition stamped March 7, 2025. With Flora Winitz, a lone Kansas City attorney, steering the effort, this isn’t a tale of sprawling estates or bitter custody wars. It’s a stark, minimalist exit from a bond tied September 28, 2024, in Las Vegas, Nevada, and broken by February 2025, felled by irreconcilable differences too deep to bridge.
Both clocked over ninety days in Missouri, civilians free of military chains, childless—no heirs, no pregnancies, just two souls untangling. The marital haul? Zero—property and debts never materialized in their fleeting stint. Benjamin’s demand is bare: split their non-marital scraps, no maintenance, no name swaps, court costs on him, legal fees split. No rival filings lurk elsewhere; this is their clean, contained endgame.
This move, lodged March 7, 2025, exposes the quiet machinery of personal rupture—a stripped-down act of reclaiming independence, less a drama than a deliberate erasure of a fleeting alliance.
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