Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon now enrolling Little Sisters in Bend

Barney Lerten

(Update: Adding video)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon, a program of J Bar J Youth Services, is excited to announce open enrollment for Little Sisters — girls ages 6 to 17 — living in Bend who could benefit from the positive influence of a mentor. Big Brothers Big Sisters provides one-to-one mentoring relationships that inspire and empower youth to reach their full potential.

“Our goal is to create meaningful, lasting connections between youth and caring adult role models,” said Program Director Jenn Davis. “Right now, we’re focused on enrolling more Little Sisters and matching them with amazing Big Sisters who are ready to be there for them.”

Through Big Brothers Big Sisters programs, Littles are paired with a trusted mentor who offers support, consistency, and friendship. Mentors and mentees meet regularly to build a connection through shared interests and activities like crafts, hiking, visiting local events, or simply hanging out and talking.

Research shows that mentored youth are more likely to succeed in school, avoid risky behaviors, and have stronger relationships. Families are invited to enroll their daughters in this free program to help foster confidence, resilience, and positive growth.

Currently Enrolling:

Girls ages 6–17

 Live in Bend, Oregon

 Open to youth from all backgrounds and identities

Big Brothers Big Sisters welcomes applications from parents, guardians, caregivers, teachers and community supports who believe a child would benefit from a mentor. Spots are limited, and early enrollment is encouraged.

 To enroll a Little Sister or learn more, visit www.bbbsco.org or call (541) 647-8084. 

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon is a 21 Cares for Kids partner.

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About Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon 

A program of J Bar J Youth Services, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon was founded in 1994. The mission of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon is to create and support one-to-one mentoring relationships that ignite the power and promise of youth. BBBSCO serves over 220 youth annually and continues to grow programming. We are committed to serving at-risk youth and youth facing adversity with mentors in our community.  

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Trinidad pharmacy to pay $250,000 after allegations of improperly handing out opioids

KRDO News

TRINIDAD, Colo. (KRDO) – The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado announced that they’ve reached a deal with COBigRed, Inc., which operates Hometown Pharmacy & Medical in Trinidad, Colorado.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office alleges that Hometown Pharmacy ignored blaring red flags and dispensed controlled substances, including opioids, to patients at times when they shouldn’t have. Officials allege those situations include when:

Prescriptions were for high daily doses of opioids

Prescriptions were for dangerous drug combinations

Patients had insurance but paid in cash for their prescriptions

Patients had traveled long distances for their prescriptions

Patients repeatedly sought early prescription refills

The U.S. Attorney’s Office says that despite these red flags, the pharmacy allegedly failed to appropriately check the State of Colorado’s Prescription Drug Monitoring Program database.

The agency says the pharmacy has agreed to pay $250,000 in civil penalties and has also entered into an agreement with the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), which officials hope will ensure the pharmacy is in compliance with laws and regulations.

Officials say the pharmacy did not admit any liability, and by settling with civil penalties, the aforementioned details of this case are all allegations.

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Highway 97 reopens after car-semi collision south of Diamond Lake in Klamath County

Barney Lerten

(Update: Highway 97 reopens)

KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (KTVZ) — A crash involving a semi-truck and car closed Highway 97 in Klamath County for a time Tuesday afternoon, Oregon State Police and the Oregon Department of Transportation reported.

The crash was reported shortly before 2 p.m. near milepost 232, about 19 miles south of the intersection with state Highway 138, the East Diamond Lake Highway.

ODOT initially advised motorists that it could be an extended delay and to use an alternate route or delay their travel. However, ODOT Region 4 Public Information Officer Kacey Davey said the closure lasted less than an hour, with minimal delays reported afterward.

You can track traffic updates at KTVZ.COM’s TripCheck page.

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SJSD School Board to review filings to fill board vacancy

News-Press NOW

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The St. Joseph School District Board of Education will hold a Special Board of Education meeting to review and possibly select a candidate to fill Rick Gehring’s spot on the Board.

The Special Meeting agenda came in right after filings closed at 4 p.m. on Tuesday, May 13, where seven candidates have shown interest in the position.

The Special Meeting will be held at 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 14, at the SJSD Administration Building, formerly known at Noyes Elementary, located at 1415 N. 26th St.

Dr. William (Bill) Couldry is a retired educator and has experience in the teaching field as an educator and administrator.

Tom Richmond works at Altec and has served on various boards throughout St. Joseph.

Cassandra Veale, who also ran for the Board’s two open positions in April, is a Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner at the Samaritan Counseling Center.

Jacob McMillian, who has previously run for the Board of Education, serves in many positions throughout the community. McMillian has been a PTA Board Member at Pickett Elementary, and has served on the Vision Forward Committee for SJSD. He is also a Lead Pastor at Journey Baptist Church and has a Doctor of Philosophy in Christian Preaching.

Katherine Seufert was a former employee at SJSD, and is currently an actor for the Performing Arts Association. Seufert taught at all four middle schools in the English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) Department.

James Young served in the United States Army and Air National Guard and has obtained a degree in History and Political Science from Missouri Western State University, as well as a Master of Divinity from Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. Young has worked as an educator in both the Platte City School District and SJSD.

Kenneth Reeder has previously served on the Board of Education and currently owns different rental, Airbnb and VRBO properties in the area. Reeder has attended, taught and lived in the SJSD his entire life.

Wednesday’s agenda notes the “Review and Possible Selection” as well as the “Possible Swearing in of New Board Member”.

News-Press NOW will provide more updates when they become available.

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Boonville man charged with murder in 2021 overdose death

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Boonville man has been charged with second-degree felony murder in a 2021 overdose death that occurred in Columbia.

Cameron Comstock, 25, is accused of selling fentanyl to a woman on Nov. 6, 2021. A warrant was ordered on Tuesday and no bond was set. A court date has not been scheduled. He is being held at Northeast Correctional Center for other charges.

The probable cause statement says that police were called to the 2600 block of Quail Drive on Nov. 7, 2021, for a report of a dead woman at a residence.

A roommate allegedly told police that the woman had bought fentanyl from Comstock the day before, the statement says. Court documents say that a drug at the scene tested positive for methamphetamine and fentanyl.

Comstock allegedly took a vehicle from the residence, police found it the same day and a chase ensued, court documents say. Comstock allegedly told police that the victim asked him to find heroine and sold her a gram for $100, the statement says.

Comstock allegedly showed police text messages of the deal getting set up, the statement says.

Court documents say that an autopsy showed the woman died from an accidental overdose of fentanyl and methamphetamine.

Court filings show he is serving time for multiple cases. In one case, he pleaded guilty to first-degree tampering with a motor vehicle, resisting arrest, leaving the scene of an accident and misdemeanor reckless driving. In another case he pleaded guilty to stealing a vehicle.  

He was sentenced to probation in both cases, but it was revoked after a violation. He also pleaded guilty in another case to first-degree tampering with a vehicle and misdemeanor driving while revoked. He is serving a 12-year sentence in total.

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Man accused of shooting Pettis County deputies now charged with additional felonies

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man who is accused of shooting two Pettis County deputies earlier this month is facing additional federal charges.

James Joseph Elsea, 62, of Marshall, was indicted on Tuesday with possessing with intending to distribute methamphetamine, shooting a gun while committing a drug trafficking crime and being a felon with a gun.

He was previously charged on May 2 with being a felon with a gun. He is being held at the Cole County Jail.

According to court documents in previous reporting, deputies served a “no-knock” warrant for a drug investigation on Friday, May 2 at a house in the 27000 block of Route BB. Court documents said that Elsea is “known to be armed.”

The SWAT team began cutting into the door when Elsea fired four shots, the complaint says. One SWAT member returned fire, the complaint says.

One of the injured SWAT members was brought to University Hospital with a shattered femur and was sent to surgery. The other was brought to Bothwell Hospital and was eventually released the same day, the statement says. The identities of the injured SWAT members have not been stated.

A gun was found in the residence.

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Mexican national who lived in Osage Beach charged with illegal gun possession, illegal reentry into the country

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Mexican national who previously lived in Osage Beach was indicted by a federal grand jury on Tuesday for two felonies, according to a press release from the Department of Justice.

Israel Ramirez-Jaramillo, 33, was charged with illegal reentry by a previously deported immigrant and being an illegal alien with a gun.

The release says Ramirez-Jaramillo was found with a gun on April 20 and that he was previously deported on July 13, 2011. It also states that he never obtained the consent from the Attorney General or the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security to reapply for admission.

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Fort Hall Police locates and arrests sex offender traveling with runaway teen

News Team

UPDATE: 3:20 PM, MAY 19, 2025

FORT HALL, Idaho (KIFI) — The Fort Hall Police Department has reportedly arrested a known sex offender, 36-year-old Eli Mosho.

Police notified the public they were looking for Mosho, who was traveling with a 16-year-old female runaway, on May 13, 2025, in a post on the department’s Facebook page.

According to the updated post, the police have located the juvenile runaway.

“We would like to thank the community for their assistance with this matter,” said police in the post.

ORIGINAL:

FORT HALL, Idaho (KIFI) — Police in Fort Hall are asking for the public’s help locating a known sex offender, 36-year-old Eli Mosho.

Courtesy, Fort Hall Police

The Fort Hall Police Department shared a post on their Facebook page indicating that Mosho is currently traveling with a 16-year-old female runaway. He is described as 5 feet 9 inches tall, with black hair and brown eyes. The 36-year-old also has several tattoos on his left hand, wrist, back, and both legs, according to the post.

Anyone with information about Mosho’s whereabouts is asked to contact the Fort Hall Police Department at (208)238-4000, their local law enforcement agency, or call 911.

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Second man convicted in the murder of a Cathedral City store owner

Jesus Reyes

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – A second man has been convicted in the murder of a Cathedral City convenience store owner gunned down during a botched robbery.

Joel Ortiz Hidalgo, 23, of Desert Hot Springs, was found guilty in the 2021 slaying of 61-year-old Chris Sgouromitis of Cathedral City.

In addition to a murder charge, Ortiz was found guilty of attempted robbery and other enhancements, including knowing another person is armed with a firearm.

Joel Ortiz Hidalgo

The other person convicted in this case, Charles Lamar Campbell, 23, of Beaumont, was found guilty of murder and other charges last week. Campbell was also convicted of attempted robbery and a special circumstance allegation of killing in the course of a robbery, as well as sentence-enhancing gun and great bodily injury allegations.

Charles Lamar Campbell

Both men are scheduled to be sentenced on July 7.

According to a trial brief filed by the District Attorney’s Office, on the night of Feb. 21, 2021, Campbell and Hidalgo were driving around the Coachella Valley in the latter’s Acura sedan, seeking to purchase a “plug” of marijuana. When a transaction fell through in Palm Springs, the men headed into Cathedral City, where Campbell directed Hidalgo onto Shifting Sands Trail and, ultimately, the Outpost Market at the intersection of Shifting Sands and Ramon Road, according to court papers.

While Hidalgo sat behind the wheel of his car, Campbell entered the convenience store, long owned and operated by Sgouromitis and his family, prosecutors said.

Although no one else was in the outlet, security surveillance video cameras inside were operating, capturing almost all of the ensuing encounter between the victim and defendant, according to the brief.

“The victim had the cash register open and appeared to be counting or organizing cash in the register as Campbell walked in … holding a semiautomatic handgun,” the narrative stated.

There were words between the men, which the video cameras did not record. The images, however, revealed Campbell allegedly raising the pistol, holding it with both hands and aiming it at the victim. The defendant fired a shot while backing toward the double doors, striking Sgouromitis in the left hip, prosecutors alleged.   

When the store owner tried to run away from the counter, Campbell allegedly fired two more shots, hitting the victim in the chest and lower back, according to the brief.

The gunfire evidently frightened Hidalgo, who sped away from the location as Campbell exited the store, the prosecution said. Campbell was forced to flee on foot through residences lining Shifting Sands, and during his getaway, he accidentally fired his 9mm pistol into a yard, where the homeowner was watching, according to court papers.   

Sgouromitis’ brother, who had been resting in a room at the back of the store when the shots rang out, initiated CPR on his sibling until Cathedral City Police Department officers arrived and took over, followed by paramedics moments later. However, the victim was pronounced dead at the scene.

He was a beloved member of the community, and CCPD released a statement within a few days of his murder, saying he was a “father of four with strong local ties, who was not involved in criminal activity and died in his longtime place of business.”

Hidalgo’s Acura was soon identified as the vehicle that had parked outside the convenience store, and the license plate was confirmed via Flock law enforcement camera recordings in Palm Springs, leading to his being tracked down and detained for questioning less than a week later.

The defendant provided details regarding what allegedly had transpired, insisting that he was only giving Campbell a ride to get some marijuana and had no foreknowledge of the planned robbery, according to the brief. He was formally arrested at the police station.

Campbell was located staying in a Beaumont motel, where detectives went to serve an arrest warrant, listening through the door as he conversed via speaker phone with his mother, allegedly telling her, “The driver was arrested, and all he has to do is give me up,” according to the prosecution.   

Officers ordered him out of the room, at which point the defendant was taken into custody without incident.   

Neither man has documented prior felony convictions in Riverside County.

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Salinas Valley Food & Wine Festival cancelled in 2025, volunteers needed for next year

Jeanette Bent

SALINAS, Calif. (KION-TV) — Another Central Coast festival is hitting the breaks this year. Although not canceled completely, the Salinas Valley Food and Wine Festival will be postponed because of financial hardships and a lack of helping hands.

“People think of lettuce and strawberries and artichokes, but I mean wine, you just look around, a lot of fields have turned to vineyards,” said Sean Laughingtree

The golden crop is what Sean, who works at an antique store in Salinas, calls grapes that grow on the central coast.

“Wine, growing of grapes has been an integral part, like a huge part of our agriculture now,” said Laughingtree.

The Salinas Valley Food and Wine Festival was a celebration of that crop, bringing in regional and local wine vendors.

Business owner Frank Savino says, beyond the buzz, the festival brings foot traffic and funds for local causes.

“The beauty of having it downtown is getting, you know, a thousand plus people to walk past your business in a four or five hour period,” said Savino

“We like donating the profit to the local community. We do education, agriculture. We have scholarships.”

One of the main organizers of the event, Joel Panzer, says there’s a slew of reasons the festival isn’t happening this year.

“The first one is just volunteer fatigue. As I mentioned, for the past six years, the core group has been putting on the festival. And we’ve been unable to recruit new volunteers from the community, our prices have really increased quite a bit over the last few years to produce it, the third dynamic is this year alone, I would say there’s probably $20,000 to $25,000 worth of corporate sponsorships or sponsorships that we know are not gonna come through,” said Joel Panzer, Organizer for the Salinas Valley Food and Wine Festival.

Panzer adds that the cost to hold the event is over 60 thousand dollars and relies on those sponsors.

Sean says he understands the reasoning behind the pause as an event organizer himself, and says postponing was the right choice if it means protecting the festival’s reputation.

“To not have enough volunteers to do that, people, I think, would go away with a really bad feeling and maybe not return the next year,” said Laughingtree.

While Panzer assures the festival will come back next year, a big question remains of if the event will remain in Old Town Salinas.

“That we don’t know we explored other options, and what we’re hearing the consistent feedback was people want it to be downtown,” said Panzer.

Some possible future venues Joel mentioned are the fairgrounds and the sheriff’s posse ground, but is working to keep it here in Old Town.

For more information about plans for the Salinas Valley Food and Wine Festival, visit salinasvalleyfoodandwine.com.

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