Man accused of having explosive device, shotguns in shopping cart

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Marshall man was charged with several felonies in Saline County on Tuesday after he was found with several weapons in a shopping cart.

John Hooper was charged with first-degree assault, armed criminal action, illegally having an illegal weapon, drug possession and unlawful use of a weapon. He is being held at the Saline County Jail without bond and has a hearing set for 10:30 a.m. Wednesday.

Court documents say that Marshall police were called to the 200 block of East Eastwood Street for reports of a man with a shopping cart filled with shotguns knocking on doors. Police saw a shotgun in the cart and Hooper allegedly said there were two guns, the probable cause statement says.

Police removed the guns and Hooper tried to take them back, the statement says. A round from one of the guns was fired into the ground during the struggle, the statement says. Hooper allegedly struggled while police tried to arrest him, according to court documents. Police used a Taser and eventually arrested him, police wrote.

Hooper was allegedly also found with methamphetamine residue and ammunition. Police then allegedly saw a homemade explosive device and a homemade incendiary device.

“The homemade explosive device was made from a plastic pink limeade container, which contained ammunition powder, construction nails, construction screws, shards of broken glass, BB ammunition and an artillery shell,” the statement says. “The homemade incendiary device was made from a glass mason jar wrapped with a gasoline soaked sock. The glass mason jar contained gasoline and an artillery shell.”

A social media post from the Marshall Police Department says that the department, the FBI and Missouri State Highway served a warrant at Hooper’s home. MPD wrote that it found baggies of meth, “epi-pens prescribed to the Marshall Public Schools, drug paraphernalia, multiple pieces of copper believed to be taken from Eastwood Elementary School, a Lenovo computer owned by Marshall Public Schools, NEC Projector belonging to the Marshall Public Schools, multiple wi-fi antennas and two incendiary devises made of glass fuel bottles.”

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ABC-7 at 4: Cruise Ship Crimes

Nichole Gomez

El Paso, TX (KVIA-TV)—Cruise ship crime reports are rising—Derek Hackert from the FBI El Paso El Paso explains what you need to know before you plan your next family vacation.

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Area gun shop urges responsible ownership during awareness month

Jenna Wilson

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — June marks Gun Violence Awareness Month and a local gun shop is using this time to promote responsible firearm ownership and safe storage practices.

While gun violence often includes homicides and assaults, it also encompasses unintentional deaths and injuries involving firearms.

Many gun-related injuries and fatalities are preventable through education, secure storage and community interventions, particularly when it comes to protecting youth, according to the CDC.

“It’s very important that kids actually do know about firearms,” said Clay Bricker, owner of Brothers Arms gun shop. “Once they understand what it is, and you try to deter them from it, their curiosity only grows.”

Officials stated that the portrayal of firearms in video games, movies and other media can lead to misunderstandings about the seriousness of guns and how critical they are in matters of life and death.

“That’s why there are rules, and that’s why there are safety concerns with owning a firearm,” Bricker said. “We have a curriculum for kids’ classes when it comes to handling firearms. We even require adults and parents to attend with the kids because it’s the interaction between children and parents that we’re really trying to reinforce.”

Bricker also commented on the recent closure of the Pigeon Hill shooting range due to safety concerns. Brothers Arms would like to see the range reopen, provided that proper safety measures are in place.

“Having rules in place will eliminate a lot of discrepancies, issues and even accidents,” Bricker said. “That’s what we strive for at our range. We want all members and customers to feel completely safe and comfortable. Ultimately, you want to be able to bring a loved one, a child, a spouse or even a beginner to a range and have them feel safe.”

Officials offered a variety of tips to gun owners for ensuring safe handling and accident prevention, such as using gun locks and storing firearms in a secure location.

“They now have fingerprint biometric safes that you can use in your home, next to your bed, in your vehicle, and other places,” Bricker said. “There are a lot of different safety options available now to keep your firearm out of the wrong hands.”

For more information about local firearm training and safety courses, visit www.brothersarms17.com.

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St. Joseph man, former William Jewell student charged for threatening to shoot up the campus

News-Press NOW

LIBERTY, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A St. Joseph man and former William Jewell College student is facing Terrorist Threat charges after threatening to shoot up the campus on Saturday, June 21.

On Tuesday, June 24, Liberty Police said the Clay County Prosecutor’s Office charged Raczkowski with Terrorist Threat 1st Degree.

Jacob A. Raczkowski, age 25 of St. Joseph, allegedly stated in a call to Liberty, MO Communications Officers that he was on campus and was planning to “start shooting” at a specific building.

A judge issued a warrant for Raczkowski and set a $100,000 bond. However, Raczkowski remains in custody in another county on unrelated charges.

Court documents say a Missouri State Highway Patrol Trooper recognized Raczkowski’s black Jeep Cherokee on Sunday, June 22, traveling east on I-70 in Lafayette County, MO, going more than 100 miles per hour.

The Jeep came to a stop when one of its tires ruptured, and Raczkowski began to flee on foot.

Raczkowski was later taken into custody before noon on Monday, June 23, and was transported to the Lafayette County Jail in Lexington, MO.

Raczkowski was also a former student and athlete at Bishop LeBlond High School.

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

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Car crashes into building in north Columbia

ABC 17 News Team

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

First responders on Tuesday were in a neighborhood just north of Interstate 70 in Columbia.

A car crashed into a building on Heriford Road. Responders on the scene told an ABC 17 News photographer that one person was brought to an area hospital with minor injuries.

Traffic was directed back to Paris Road while crews investigated a downed power line.

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Columbia police reveal new details in 1994 unsolved murder of Virginia ‘Ginger’ Davis

Meghan Drakas

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Columbia police are revealing new details about the unsolved case of Virginia ‘Ginger’ Davis.

Police say on the morning of June 6, 1994, authorities found Davis inside her home at 1508 Patsy Lane in only her underwear with a plastic bag over her head.

According to a 1994 media release, a neighbor called authorities and asked for a welfare check after she noticed one of Davis’ five dogs was left outside all night. That neighbor reported that Davis would never leave one of her dogs outside overnight and she had not seen Davis since June 3.

The Columbia Police Department media release from then states officers found the home was locked. Officers entered the home by removing a screen and entering through an open window.

CPD Lt. Matt Gremore confirmed to ABC 17 News recently, there were two holes cut into the screen and her purse was found inside the home.

Autopsy report

An autopsy report on June 7, 1994, revealed there was a binding mark around the neck, impact to her head and other bruises. The cause of death was labeled as suffocation.

“She had blunt force trauma to the head as well as the bag,” Gremore said. “My theory would be that the bag was absolutely a weapon that was used, but I don’t know if that was the only thing that was used.”

Gremore said police have never identified the object used to cause the injuries to her head.

Gremore revealed new details and said the plastic bag was tied with a bathrobe belt found inside Davis’ home. He said the plastic bag was also linked to prior purchase made by Davis, but would not say if the bag had any identifiable markings on it.

Gremore said evidence of a sexual assault is still not determined. Davis was also found with bruises on her arms and legs, which may have been caused during her last moments.

“There’s evidence to make you think that there were some defensive wounds there, that there was a fight that took place,” Gremore said.

The autopsy report labels the death as a homicide.

Two days after determining Davis’s death was a homicide, CPD reported the information generated an increase in calls from residents. Police asked for assistance from the Mid-Missouri Major Case Squad earlier this month, bringing the total number of investigators on the case to 12.

Early life

Ginger Davis was born in 1950 and was one of four children. She grew up in Mid-Missouri and attended Hallsville High School.

Marceil Flatt was neighbors with the family and graduated alongside Davis in 1968. Flatt said she was a little quiet but she was friends with everyone.

“She had horses and we would ride the horses together,” Flatt said. “That was so much fun having neighbors like that.”

Hallsville School District R-4 Class of 1968 Photo. Marceil Flatt pictured as last photo in the top row, formerly Marceil Nolte. Ginger Davis is seen as fourth person from left in fourth row. (Credit: Marceil Flatt)

She described Davis as being a fun and giggly young girl who loved animals. Her family was also involved in 4-H.

“They sewed, made their own clothes,” Flatt said. “That just stayed with her all of her life. One of the things her and her mother did together was they had a rock tumbler or stone tumbler and they tumbled stones and then made jewelry with those.”

Later in life, Davis moved to Colorado where she got married and divorced twice. One of Davis’ cousins, Kathryn Ruble, said she married into the Native American culture and sometimes wore clothing reflective of this.

Virginia ‘Ginger’ Davis, date unknown (Credit: Shawn Patrick)

Ruble said Davis was eventually diagnosed with Lupus, which became a strain on her marriage and she moved back to Mid-Missouri to be closer to her mother. Her nephew Shawn Patrick said the two often enjoyed quilting together and was a part of a group in the Columbia area.

“It affected my grandma, her mom,” Patrick said. “It devastated her. My grandma outlived all of her own kids and she was closest with Ginger.”

More than three decades later, Patrick is still in disbelief over what happened to his aunt.

“After we found out how she was killed, that shocked us even more,” Patrick said. “It hit hard for a lot of our family, because we just couldn’t believe that anybody could do that to anybody, but especially to our own family,” Patrick said.

ABC 17 News at the time reported neighbors described Davis as a friendly woman who offered help to a neighbor while he was moving in. That was despite the fact she had Lupus and at times used a wheelchair.

Decades later

In January 2023, CPD announced it reopened the case and sent evidence off for additional testing.

Gremore told ABC 17 News there was DNA evidence collected at the scene in 1994 that was from another person.

“In this case, there is DNA,” Gremore said. “But we don’t have enough information to say whose DNA it is.”

But Gremore revealed to ABC 17 News the DNA profile is of a male. He said it’s possible the killer had injuries from the attack.

“It’s hard to know if there was something that lead up to this, if the house had been cased or if this was a spontaneous build where it’s decided to go and do this,” Gremore said. “But my gut feeling says this was probably something that was thought out.”

Authorities investigate Virginia ‘Ginger’ Davis homicide scene on June 6, 1994 on Patsy Lane in Columbia.

After Davis died, her nephew helped clean out the small blue home on Patsy Lane.

“The main thing I remember from cleaning out, seeing all the fingerprint dust all over the place. I mean it was just everywhere,” Patrick said. “That’s what stuck out in mind of just the amount of the black powder all over the place.”

Patrick hopes one day, the person who killed his aunt will be held accountable.

“I believe it would give us some closure,” Patrick said. “I mean, it’s been so long. Our feeling are kind of numb to it now, but actually knowing who did it….just getting that closure, knowing who it was and if they are still alive, finding out why, you know, why did they do this.”

Ruble says she would also like to see the person who hurt Davis to be brought to justice.

“We would like to see the person or persons be arrested, brought [to] trial and found guilty. No matter what sentence the court give[s] out,” Ruble said. “They’re going to have to stand in front of God on judgement day. He will have the last word. No matter how much time that person would receive, it [can] not bring back our beloved Ginger and the beauty she brought to this world.”

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San Jose police officer arrested, held without bail

KTVU FOX 2

SAN JOSE, Calif. (KTVU-TV) — An officer with the San Jose Police Department was arrested and is being held without bail in the Santa Clara County Jail.

Officer Timothy Faye was taken into custody on Wednesday in a case relating to “family violence,” according to county case records.

Dig deeper:

According to the East Bay Times, Faye was arrested in a Morgan Hill home after allegedly “drunkenly firing his gun.” The newspaper also reported the officer was arrested shortly before in Monterey County on suspicion of willful cruelty to a child.

What they’re saying:

The San Jose Police Department confirmed an officer of theirs was arrested.

“We take these matters seriously and are fully cooperating with the investigating agency,” the department said.

Faye has been placed on administrative leave. Officials said they are limited in the information they can share about personnel matters and administrative investigations.

“The trust of our community is of utmost importance, and we remain dedicated to accountability, transparency, and integrity.”

Local perspective:

Faye was one of two officers behind the fatal police shooting of a man at a San Jose power plant in 2018.

A man armed with an ax at the Metcalf Energy Center was gunned down by police. In his possession, the man also had another ax, six throwing knives, and pepper spray.

The man, according to the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office, yelled “shoot me” and “kill me” to the officers and ignored orders to drop his weapon.

What’s next:

Faye has a court appearance scheduled on Wednesday. No attorney was listed for him in case records.

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As measles cases spread to nearby states, Idaho health officials stress vaccination

Ariel Jensen

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI)– Health officials in Idaho are urging caution as the CDC continues to confirm increasing Measles cases across the United States. Over the weekend, neighboring Utah was added to the list as public health officials announced the state’s first confirmed measles case, the latest in over a thousand cases in 36 states.

The CDC identified that 95% of these cases were from people who may have been unvaccinated. The Gem State has been listed in the top 10 States with the highest rates of children who have not received a measles vaccine or whose vaccination records are not up to date. 

“I know it’s been steadily declining throughout the past year. And so the main data that we have is for vaccinated school kids. It does show that about 20% are unvaccinated or under-vaccinated. So that decline has just been occurring. You know, after COVID, we’ve seen those declines in all vaccines,” said Esmeralda Quintero, Nurse Manager for Eastern Idaho Public Health.

Quintero encourages everyone to check their vaccination records. If they don’t know how to do that, give Eastern Idaho Public Health a call to get answers on protecting against measles. For more information, click HERE.

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Early US intelligence report suggests US strikes only set back Iran’s nuclear program by months

Associated Press

By MICHELLE L. PRICE and MARY CLARE JALONICK – Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — A new U.S. intelligence report found that Iran’s nuclear program has been set back only a few months after a U.S. strike and was not “completely and fully obliterated†as President Donald Trump has said, according to two people familiar with the early assessment.

The intelligence report issued by the Defense Intelligence Agency on Monday contradicts statements from Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the status of Iran’s nuclear facilities. The people were not authorized to address the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

According to the people, the report found that while the Saturday strikes at the Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan nuclear sites did significant damage, they were not totally destroyed.

The assessment found that at least some of Iran’s highly enriched uranium was moved out of multiple sites before the U.S. strikes and survived, according to the people, and it also found that Iran’s centrifuges are largely intact.

At the deeply buried Fordo uranium enrichment plant, the entrance collapsed and infrastructure was damaged, so that will take time to fix, but the underground infrastructure was not destroyed, according to one of the people. The person also said that previous assessments had warned of this outcome at Fordo.

The White House strongly pushed back on the assessment, calling it “flat-out wrong.â€

“The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean President Trump, and discredit the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran’s nuclear program,†White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement. “Everyone knows what happens when you drop fourteen 30,000 pound bombs perfectly on their targets: total obliteration.â€

Trump has said in comments and posts on social media in recent days, including Tuesday, that the strikes left the sites in Iran “totally destroyed†and that Iran will never rebuild its nuclear facilities.

Netanyahu said in a televised statement on Tuesday that, “For dozens of years I promised you that Iran would not have nuclear weapons and indeed … we brought to ruin Iran’s nuclear program.”

He said the U.S. joining Israel was “historic” and thanked Trump.

The CIA and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence declined to comment on the DIA assessment. ODNI coordinates the work of the nation’s 18 intelligence agencies, including the DIA, which is the intelligence arm of the Defense Department, responsible for producing intelligence on foreign militaries and the capabilities of adversaries.

The intelligence assessment was first reported by CNN on Tuesday.

Associated Press writers Eric Tucker and David Klepper contributed to this report

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CAL FIRE SLO crews tend to two-acre grass fire in Arroyo Grande Tuesday

Caleb Nguyen

ARROYO GRANDE, Calif. – CAL FIRE SLO crews helped with a two-acre grass fire at Huasna and Everglade Road in Arroyo Grande just before 2:30 Tuesday.

Engine crews helped one structure affected by the fire which had a slow rate of spread and potential for five acres, according to CAL FIRE SLO.

Forward progress of the fire stopped 30 minutes after it first broke out, according to CAL FIRE SLO.

A CAL FIRE SLO incident commander mentioned downed power lines near the incident and urged those in the area to be cautious.

More information on this fire will be provided as it becomes available to Your News Channel.

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