New VEG ER for Pets set to open in Palm Desert

Kendall Flynn

PALM DESERT, Calif. (KESQ) – VEG ER for Pets is announcing the opening of its Palm Desert location, providing families in the community with “the highest level of emergency care.”

VEG ER for Pets was established in 2014 to help people and their pets when they need it most. Organizers say the group of hospitals has revolutionized the pet emergency experience with a customer-centered approach, rapid response times and emergency-focused staff.

The ER will provide veterinary medicine, including surgeries, ultrasounds, x-rays and more. It is the first VEG hospital in the Coachella Valley and the 12th VEG hospital in California. VEG says it reworks the emergency medicine experience but making the process work for people and their pets.

The Palm Desert pet hospital is open for emergencies 24/7, even on holidays. The new space will have an open floor plan, allowing pet parents to have “freedom of movement and to see life-saving heroics up close,” according to the press release.

Pet parents even have the opportunity to to stay with their pet through all stages of treatment, including surgery and overnight hospitalization.

Organizers will mark the opening of the VEG ER for Pets on May 14th with a ribbon cutting at 11:30 a.m. at 73495 CA-111 in Palm Desert.

Stay with News Channel 3 to hear from VEG medical directors about the new Palm Desert ER.

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Who is Pope Leo XIV, Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost

Olivia Vara

EL PASO, Texas (KVIA) — Pope Leo the 14th is 69 years old and spent years doing missionary work and as a bishop in Peru.

He has dual-citizenship in Peru and the U.S. from that time.

In his inaugural address, Pope Leo the 14th emphasized peace and called for unity among families and communities.

This new Pope is also the first member of the Augustinian order to take the papal seat and the second pontiff from the americas.

Pope Leo the 14th also previously supported notable reforms, including supporting the inclusion of women in church governance.

Local church leaders are learning more about this Pope, including how Leo the 14th’s election could be a continuation of the progression initiated by Pope Francis – along with American values.

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Monroe County man sentenced to life in prison in elderly woman’s death

Maria Schneider

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man was sentenced to life in prison Friday after being found guilty of killing an 88-year-old woman in 2021.

Lyle Miller, 68, of Madison, Missouri, was convicted by a jury in March of second-degree murder and tampering with evidence in the December 2021 death of Betty Hayes, 88.  Miller was arrested in July 2023.

According to court documents in previous reporting, a witness told investigators they saw Miller driving away quickly from Madison the night Hayes went missing. Her remains were eventually found in a pond.

Investigators believe Miller was angry with Hayes over unpaid work he had done for her.

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QUESTION OF THE DAY: Does the pope’s nationality matter to you?

ABC17NEWS

A new pope was chosen on Thursday. And for the first time in centuries of church history, he’s an American.

Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost was elected pontiff and chose the name Leo XIV before greeting the faithful in St. Peter’s Square. Leo has already drawn comparisons to his predecessor, Pope Francis.

He’s the first American ever to head the Vatican. And while that is historic, Leo has a varied international biography, and the pontiff is selected to guide the faithful around the world.

Do you think the pope’s nationality matters? Vote in the poll.

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Nodaway County Sheriff’s Office announces ‘Fish with a First Responder’

Leah Rainwater

MARYVILLE, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Youth ages 15 and under are invited to enjoy a day of fishing alongside first responders who serve Nodaway County.

This is the second year the Nodaway County Sheriff’s Office has put on ‘Fish with a First Responder’.

The event will take place from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, May 10 at Nodaway Lake. Registration is free and youth will register on-site upon arrival.

Registered youth will be entered into a raffle for a chance to win prizes.

Fishing poles will be given out to attendees on a first come-first serve basis. Tackle will also be provided. The Nodaway County Cattlemen’s Association is providing the beef for burgers, which will be provided at no cost to those who come out.

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How Bryan Kohberger could get the death penalty off the table before his trial even starts

CNN Newsource

By Jean Casarez, CNN

(CNN) — Bushy eyebrows. DNA on a knife sheath. Amazon purchase records.

The evidence that Judge Steven Hippler is allowing prosecutors to admit in the death penalty trial of Brian Kohberger is substantial.

Defendants in other high-profile death penalty cases have been down Kohberger’s road, faced with potentially making a life-or-death decision before a jury does it for them. Take a plea deal if prosecutors will agree and avoid a potential death sentence or go to trial?

Some defendants don’t want to take the risk of being sentenced to death so they plead guilty to murder charges and agree to live the rest of their life in state prison. Others assert their innocence and hope the strength of the defense will show reasonable doubt is on their side, so they go to trial.

Prosecutors aren’t required to entertain a plea deal to bargain away the death penalty but often they do.

Whether Kohberger is actually considering a plea deal in the killing of four University of Idaho students on November 13, 2022, is unknown. Not guilty pleas have been entered on his behalf.

The brutality of the killings of Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin at an off-campus home in Moscow, Idaho, and the lack of clarity on Kohberger’s potential connections to the group of friends have made it one of the highest-profile cases in the US.

Due to a wide-ranging gag order, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and attorneys for victims’ families and witnesses are prohibited from saying anything publicly, aside from what is already in the public record.

How other defendants played it

In Idaho just last year, Chad Daybell was facing the death penalty, charged with murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the deaths of his first wife and the two children of his current wife. The killings took place in small-town communities in Idaho, but the trial was moved to Boise to ensure Daybell’s right to a fair and impartial jury. For similar reasons, Kohberger’s trial was moved from Moscow to Boise.

Daybell decided to proceed to trial.

Last May he was convicted of all murder charges during the guilt phase of the trial. During the penalty phase, the jury found all aggravating factors beyond a reasonable doubt. He was then sentenced to death.

Notorious serial killer Gary Ridgway, also known as the Green River Killer, pleaded guilty in Washington State in June 2003 to 48 counts of aggravated murder in exchange for prosecutors not seeking the death penalty.

For his part, Ridgway had to provide complete truthful and candid information concerning his crimes and had to provide a written statement to the court describing what he did to all 48 victims and why. The prosecutor read the statement in court at sentencing.

Scott Peterson, accused of murdering his wife, Laci, and their unborn son, Conner, in central California in 2003, was offered a plea bargain early on in lieu of seeking the death penalty if he would tell them where the victims were.

He refused, maintaining his innocence, according to local prosecutors at the time, so they filed notice of intent to seek death.

Peterson was convicted for the murders in 2004, with the jury recommending death. He was sentenced in 2005 and put on death row in California. His death sentence was overturned in 2020 because of a jury issue. The next year, Peterson was resentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. He is still seeking to get his conviction overturned.

In Florida, Casey Anthony was charged with first-degree murder in the death of her daughter Caylee. Indicted in 2008, prosecutors announced in 2009 they would be seeking death.

Anthony decided to proceed to trial. During the course of the trial, she was offered a plea to get death off the table. She refused the offer and ultimately was acquitted of all major charges by a unanimous jury.

Jurors must be willing to vote for death

In the Kohberger case, the judge has denied the defense team’s two motions to strike the death penalty, one on Kohberger‘s autism spectrum disorder diagnosis, and the other on a voluminous amount of discovery that defense attorneys say they can’t begin to look at because there isn’t time. The trial is in August, with jury selection beginning the end of July.

When prosecutors in June 2023 filed notice of intent to seek the death penalty, they alleged aggravating factors warranting death, which included the fact there were multiple victims, that the killings were heinous, atrocious and cruel and that the defendant would be a continuing threat to society.

As a result, before the trial itself begins this summer, during jury selection there will be an added layer to the process.

Selected jurors must be death qualified, meaning they are willing to vote for death after convicting Kohberger if they believe beyond a reasonable doubt that aggravating factors exist which warrant the ultimate punishment.

For a defendant considering how to proceed in a criminal trial, it is all about reasonable doubt. Reasonable doubt can lead to an out-and-out acquittal or even a mistrial, which can be a gift to the defendant if prosecutors decide to not try the case again.

DNA evidence key to prosecution’s case

Key evidence for prosecutors is the single source DNA found from a knife sheath found on a bed close to Mogen.

The single source profile was determined to be male and the probable identity of the DNA came from investigative genetic genealogy, which is the process of taking unknown DNA to public databases and finding relatives that share the profile.

Old-fashioned investigative work follows, looking at age, geographical location, and gender of relatives. That can determine a possible source of the unknown, genetic material.

In this case, the FBI did the testing along with some investigation early on, and the results culminated into the tip that led Idaho investigators to a Ph.D student in criminology at nearby Washington State University named Kohberger.

Doing forensic DNA testing from trash outside the Kohberger family home in northeastern Pennsylvania in December 2022 gave Idaho law enforcement the probable cause to arrest Kohberger.

A DNA profile obtained from the trash “identified a male as not being excluded as the biological father of the Suspect,” according to the probable cause affidavit.

Once that testing was confirmed, Kohberger was arrested in December 2022.

According to legal filings, buccal swab DNA testing from Kohberger himself, following the arrest, proved to be a “statistical match” to the DNA on the knife sheath.

Both sides have agreed they do not want the jury to hear about the genetic genealogy process in this case, but that it will only be referred to before the jury as a tip.

But the single source DNA identification on that KA-BAR knife sheath will come into evidence.

Legal documents give a preview on how the defense will counter this by questioning when and how the DNA on the sheath was transferred there.

DNA found under the nails of one of the victims has been determined to be inconclusive as to the defendant, a plus for the defense.

Amazon purchase records evidence allowed at trial

Along with DNA, the judge is also allowing purchase records of the alleged murder weapon.

Eight months before the killings, Kohberger purchased on Amazon a knife, sheath, and sharpener made by the same company as the KA-BAR sheath found at the crime scene, according to prosecutors’ court filings.

In a recent hearing, Judge Hippler noted the purchase was made under Kohberger’s name, and after the purchase searches were made on the Amazon account to find out where the items were during the shopping and delivery process.

After the homicides, on the same Amazon account, the purchaser looked at “knives” again, according to documents and oral arguments during a recent pre-trial hearing.

While the defense argued to keep this Amazon click activity out of the trial because the account is a family account, the judge responded by saying the purchase was under Kohberger’s particular name on the account and the evidence would come in.

Hippler is allowing the account’s click activity pertaining to knives and knife accessories, the payment method used, and details of items in the cart, including all items added to the cart and removed from the cart or wish listed in the shopping bag. The defense can cross-examine using an expert on the Amazon activity and purchases.

‘Bushy eyebrows’ testimony allowed

Another critical piece of evidence involves the identity of the attacker, who prosecutors allege is Kohberger.

One of the two surviving roommates in that home in the early morning hours of November 13, 2022, stepped out of her bedroom at that time and, according to the probable cause affidavit, “saw a figure clad in black clothing and a mask that covered the person’s mouth and nose walking towards her.”

The surviving roommate, identified as D.M., described the figure as 5 feet, 10 inches or taller, male, not very muscular, but athletically built with bushy eyebrows, according to the affidavit.

The defense at a recent hearing fought hard to keep that description out, especially “bushy eyebrows,” because they argued the roommate did not originally give that information to law enforcement. It didn’t come out until the second interview with police and one of the detectives asked her about the man’s eyebrows. D.M. did not independently bring it up.

The judge disagreed, allowing the witness to testify about it.

According to prosecutors, later on that morning, at 10:30 a.m., Kohberger took a close-up picture of himself in a bathroom. The jurors will be allowed to consider this photo and assess his eyebrows themselves.

Law restricts alibi defense

The judge has determined that an alibi instruction to the jury will not be given at the end of trial, unless the defendant can bring to the court more substantial evidence of an actual alibi.

Carving out an alibi has been difficult for the Kohberger defense because they have consistently maintained their client was out driving alone during the early morning hours of November 13, 2022.

The defense has offered an expert witness who would testify using location data from phone records to show approximately where the defendant was driving during some of those hours.

Hippler responded asking what witnesses were going to say, “He’s driving around looking at the stars?” The judge insisted to the defense, “You have to have someone testify to that.”

The judge determined the defense expert will be able to show that Kohberger was at a certain place until 2:50 a.m. That is when his phone was turned off, a little more than an hour before the killings took place.

The only other way for information to come in after that 2:50 a.m. phone shut off would be for Kohberger himself to take the stand.

Under Idaho law, before trial, a defendant must provide not only the specific place they were during the time the crimes were being committed but also names and addresses of those who saw the defendant at that alternate location.

Defense floats alternate suspect theory

Lead defense attorney Anne Taylor said at that hearing in April they are planning to call an expert witness who will say it’s likely that two people committed the crime with two weapons.

Taylor didn’t expand on the theory but later said she’s also chasing a lead on an alternate suspect.

The lead was buried in thousands of tips collected by law enforcement that Taylor said she is still combing through.

“We came across a tip that would appear to be an alternate suspect and we’re trying to work through that as rapidly as we can,” Taylor said. “It was quite a surprise to come up with that. There’s got to be more in there that I need to know…”

Kohberger’s legal team has previously said it plans to present evidence of alternate perpetrators ahead of trial.

Hippler has said there will be a May deadline for the defense to present that evidence because waiting for it to come up at trial would be too late. At this time nothing has been filed by the defense in the court’s docket.

No one can accurately predict what will happen in a trial. Jurors are selected based on their word that they can be fair and impartial in looking at the evidence.

But the emotion within those four walls of that Boise courtroom coming from the reality that four young lives were taken right as they were beginning their adulthood may be as strong a force as the evidence heard.

Kohberger, however, has a presumption of innocence under the Constitution, and reasonable doubt also can be a strong force in the mind of a juror as they deliberate.

As Taylor said to the court during the change of venue hearing last year, Kohberger “is innocent, your Honor, but it’s the country that has decided he is guilty.”

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Jean Casarez is a licensed attorney in Texas and Nevada. She is CNN’s trial correspondent.

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First U.S. born pope sparks local excitement and hope

Charles Christian

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — As the bells rang out at the Vatican after the election of Pope Leo XIV as the new Supreme Pontiff of the Catholic Church, the bells of the Cathedral of St. Joseph could be heard throughout downtown.

Father Stephen Hansen said that he, like much of the world, was surprised that a U.S. born Cardinal, born just in Chicago, is now the pope. However, Hansen said that the message of Pope Leo XIV echoes the care for the poor that his predecessor Pope Francis brought to the church, accompanied by an ongoing emphasis upon peace.

“I loved his constant reference to the word ‘peace’,” Hansen said. “He also emphasized the need to be bridge builders, and to be welcoming.”

Given the new pontiff’s missionary background, having spent many years doing mission work in Peru, and leading the Augustinian religious order of the Church, Hansen said Leo has established himself as a well-respected leader, calling him “well-seasoned.”

Because everyone found out about this unlikely new pope at the same time, even the local diocese was caught a bit off guard. Ashlie Hand, communications coordinator of the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City/St. Joseph, said that Bishop Jeffrey Johnston spent much of the day reading up on the background of Pope Leo and preparing to give responses to local media and to the diocese. She added that he would likely have an official statement by the end of the week welcoming the Church’s new leader.

The Cathedral of St. Joseph held a Rosary prayer gathering on the night of Leo XIV’s election and will host special masses in the coming days.

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Charges filed on man at center of Thursday’s police response at south Columbia apartment building

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Columbia man who was arrested in relation to a large police response that occurred Thursday at Forest Village Apartments has been charged.

Ramelus Bradley, 19, was charged in Boone County on Friday with unlawful use of a weapon, third-degree domestic assault and misdemeanor fourth-degree domestic assault. He is being held at the Boone County Jail without bond.

According to the probable cause statement filed by the Columbia Police Department, the victim called dispatchers saying that Bradley was outside her residence with a gun. She called using a friend’s phone and claimed that Bradley took her phone and tried to steal her vehicle, the statement says.

Bradley was allegedly upset with what he saw on the victim’s phone and pushed her into a closet, court documents say. Her 2-year-old son was in the apartment at the time, court documents say.

Bradley allegedly ran out of the apartment to get the vehicle, but the victim jumped on the roof of the vehicle so he wouldn’t leave, the statement says. Bradley allegedly pulled the woman off the vehicle and then she got into the vehicle’s backseat, the statement says.

The statement then says Bradley drove to a parking lot near Mizzou Arena, threatened the woman with a gun and choked her. Bradley then allegedly drove the woman back to the apartment and told her to get her son because he was going to leave, court documents allege. A probable cause statement filed by MUPD says that Bradley allegedly threatened to kill the victim.

The woman got on top of the vehicle again and was able to get into the driver’s seat, the statement says. When the woman drove away, she saw Bradley holding a key and her cellphone, court docs say.

Bradley allegedly told police later that he pushed the victim on the bed and the grabbed her arms and moved her into a closet after she fought back, the statement says. Bradley also allegedly denied pulling out a gun and strangling the victim. MUPD wrote that they did not “observe injuries to the victim’s neck.”

The statement says that Bradley left the area prior to police arriving. However, police were on the scene for several hours and ABC 17 News reporters heard police calling out his name and telling him to come out of the apartment.

A press release from the Columbia Police Department says that Bradley was arrested in the 2500 block of Quail Drive. Jail records indicate that he booked into the jail at 2:17 a.m. Friday.

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Furry Friends: Kona the lab loves to wag her tail

Kelsey Merison

This week’s Furry Friend is Kona, a 7-year-old black lab who is a very happy girl.

Don’t let her age fool you, Kona is still full of puppy energy.

“She’s a pretty typical lab, so she loves to chase a ball, play with a toy. She loves snacks, and she’s just a happy girl. She’ll make a great partner for most homes,” said Paige Kidd, the development and volunteer manager at Brightside Animal Center. “She’s still got some puppy energy, so she’ll be a great walking buddy. She doesn’t need a ton of exercise because she is seven. She’d love to go for walks and then just hang out with her people for the rest of the day.”

Right now at Brightside, the adoption fee for dogs over the age of one is just $20.

Click here to view Kona’s profile on Brightside’s website.

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Robidoux Row Museum brings students on westward expansion tour 

Chris Fortune

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Robidoux Row Museum is giving elementary school kids a history lesson on an event that helped shape the United States today. 

Rock Port Elementary students visited the museum to hear about westward expansion and build upon what they recently learned in class. 

“We spent a lot of time learning about the Oregon Trail and the Santa Fe Trail, the Pony Express, just everything about moving west from the colonies and extending the United States,” fifth grade teacher Danyal Coon said.

Coon found Robidoux Row Museum after researching what learning opportunities were available in the area.

“I knew that they had some great museums in St. Joe, and so this one popped up in my search, and I got to talking to the people that worked here, and it sounded like it would be a great place for students to come learn more about westward expansion,” she said.

Exhibits in the museum give visitors the chance to learn about westward expansion through firsthand accounts of those who traveled west.

“Part of the purchase of Northwest Missouri was actually facilitated by Joseph Robidoux and some of his relations with the Native Americans,” Museum Coordinator Michael Thomas said. “So I think some of that history should be brought to light.”

Some teachers at Rock Port Elementary said, it’s important to provide visual aids for their lesson on the history of western expansion.

“I think it’s important for them to get hands-on experiences because those last a lot longer in your memory than just reading books about it, which is great too, but when you compare the two together, that’s what really sticks,” fifth grade teacher Ciara Hunter said.

The Rock Port Elementary tour wrapped up a busy week at the Robidoux Row Museum, which included a total of four tours.

“I thought I was going to have a sedentary position working in the museum, and it’s been very active,” Thomas said. “The museum has been very lively since it opened up (again in March).”

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