4th of July logistics already going into place in many cities where thousands will gather

John Palminteri

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – A large sand berm is being built up on the Santa Barbara West Beach section where the 4th of July fireworks show will be held.

The annual show will draw over 20,000 people to that immediate site of the waterfront and over 100,000 from East Beach to Shoreline Park and surrounding neighborhoods.

The sky will light up after a day of music on the West Beach stage featuring local musicians playing patriotic music, rock ‘n roll and crowd favorites. The show is free and funded by local sponsors.

The fireworks display is paid for by the City of Santa Barbara Waterfront Department and coordinated by many city departments including the Parks and Recreation Department, the PARC Foundation and Public Works.

Betsy Weber recalls last year. “We’ve never seen  a beach front as  spectacular for sure!” She said ” it was festive and fun and crowded  and joyful it was wonderful!” Her husband would rather be away from the area saying “it is closer to the fridge!” at home.

The public will see many areas changing this week in time for celebrations and gatherings around the Central Coast for the 4th of July festivities.

No parking signs will be going up on Cabrillo Boulevard to clear out specific areas for vendors and roll off dumpsters. There will be a designated area for the Land Shark touring vehicle that will remain in place.

A patriotic look is going up on Stearns Wharf with flags and bunting. American flags will also be up on State Street in the downtown area.

The public often looks to secure prime viewing spots on Leadbetter Beach and Chase Palm Park prior to the fireworks shows. That includes the picnic areas and open spaces on the grass. Tents, pop-ups and cooking sites will be full.

The area will be closely patrolled by Santa Barbara Police, the Harbor Patrol, Park Rangers and Santa Barbara City Fire.

Some will be closer to their neighborhoods and hang with friends there. “I think I am just going to stay home and be with family and stay off the beaches,”   said Alicia James a recent high school graduate.   “That’s how I grew up being with family and spending time with them. It just means a lot to me ya know?”

Lucia Metcalfe says will be using peddle power. “I would say biking is the best way  if you can park kind of far away and you don’t have to deal with parking or traffic.”

Montecito is getting set for its parade from Upper Manning Park to Lower Manning Park on the 4th of July. It starts at 11:30 a.m. and is put on by the Montecito Association.

Earlier in the morning there will be a pancake breakfast at the main Montecito Fire Station. “Pancake breakfast with the fire department is always my favorite, I went to cold spring school and we knew all the firefighters at the Montecito Fire department,” said Metcalfe.

Butterfly beach is one area where a ban on bonfires is being enforced.

No fireworks are allowed other than authorized shows.

That includes safe and sane fireworks. They can only be used in the cities where they are sold including Fillmore, Santa Maria, Lompoc, and Guadalupe.

The ban on fireworks of any type will be in place in Carpinteria, Summerland, Montecito, Santa Barbara, Goleta and the Los Padres National Forest.

Goleta will have an alternative to a fireworks sky show. It will have a drone show at Dos Pueblos High School with the gates opening at 6 and the show at dusk.

The Santa Barbara County Courthouse Sunken Gardens will have the Primetime Band with patriotic music and sing-a-longs at 5 p.m.

There will be street closures on some sections of Cabrillo Boulevard on the waterfront at 6 p.m. and Stearns Wharf will not allow cars, just people, after 3 p.m.

4th of July – Santa Barbara West Beach

West Beach Bandstand Music Show Lineup

12:00 p.m. –  12:15 p.m. Ala Carte 

 with Jan Ingram and Henry Garrett  (American patriotic favorites)

12:20 p.m. -12:50 p.m.  Rock Shop Academy  

1:00 p.m. – 1:45 p.m. – Goodlanders ( rock cover songs)2:00 p.m. – 2:45 p.m. – Peer Pressure (rock cover songs)3:30 p.m. – 3:45 p.m. – The Three Combroneros  (70’s cover)4:00 p.m. – 4:45 p.m. – Walking Coco (cover songs)

5:00 p.m. – 5:45 p.m. – The Other Woman (rock, cover songs)

5:45 pm   Old Spanish Days.  El Presidente Fritz Olenberger   Spirit – Natalia Trevinio   Junior Spirit – Victoria Placencia6:00 p.m. – 6:45 p.m. – Ladyfinger. (Grateful Dead cover)

7:00 p.m. – 7:45 p.m. – East Valley Rd  (originals, rock and R & B)

7:45 p.m.     Uncle Sam Patriotic tribute   Army veteran Kraig Pakulski  

8:00 p.m. – 8:45 p.m. – False Puppet  (rock)

8:45 p.m.     Kiki Reyes  Star Spangled Banner     Oscar Gutierrez  Pledge of Allegiance

9:00 p.m. – 9:20 p.m. – Fireworks!  

* plus special guests including La Boheme Dancers throughout the day

Media partners 92.9 KJEE       and  KEYT  Newschannel 3-12

Cabrillo Boulevard Sidewalk at West Beach

11:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m. 

 Tink’s Old Fashioned Hot Dogs, Lidos Philly Cheese Steaks, Timbers Roadhouse, G Brothers Kettle Corn, Elubia’s Kitchen, and The Deli Doctor.

Sponsors:The Point Market  and The Fuel Depot, Rudi Schulte Family Foundation, Montecito Bank & Trust, American Riviera Bank, The Berry Man, Santa Barbara Eyeglass Factory, Ablitt’s Fine Cleaners and Tailors, Oshay Family Foundation, La Boheme Productions, Carlton Electrical, Dario Pini Investments, Herc Rentals

Event Coordinators in partnership with the City of Santa Barbara:Roger Perry Insurance, Kim Stabile -Timbers, Islay Events, Hector Hurtado, John Palminteri – host

Logistics:  Santa Barbara Waterfront Department, Parks and Recreation, PARC Foundation, Public Works,  Parking, Harbor Patrol, Police, Fire and Marborg Industries..

Fireworks – Garden State FireworksAll fireworks outside of the city’s show are illegal.  To report specific sites, contact SBPD’s Dispatch Center’s non-emergency line at 805-882-8900.  For emergencies, dial 9-1-1 with specific details.

Lifeguards will be on duty from 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. at Leadbetter Beach, West Beach, and East Beach.

Additional bike racks will be in place.The MTD Shuttle will be in operation until 6 p.m. along the waterfront.

Road closures:

Cabrillo Boulevard (from Castillo Street to Calle Cesar Chavez)

Closed to vehicle traffic at 6:00 p.m. 

State Street (from Gutierrez Street to Cabrillo Boulevard)

Closed to vehicle traffic at 6:00 p.m. 

Stearns Wharf

Closed to vehicle traffic at 3:30 p.m.

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Problem Solvers: Gov. Kotek slams lawmakers after transportation bill fails, hundreds of ODOT layoffs announced

Isabella Warren

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ)– The legislative session officially ended Friday, and transportation funding failed to pass.

Democrats presented the package just last month, sending legislators across the aisle into a frenzy to ensure funding could be passed. Without that funding, the Oregon Department of Transportation says up to 1,000 jobs could be cut. 

However, bipartisan support could not be achieved, and legislators went home two days early.

Governor Tina Kotek has slammed the Legislature for not working to pass a package by Sunday, the legal last day of the session. At a press conference Saturday, she said, “I’m going to point out again, I’m here. Constitutional sine die is tomorrow. And legislators have gone home, and they have not produced anything on transportation that we need right now in the state.”

The Problem Solvers spoke with state Representative Emerson Levy, D-Bend, on Tuesday. She says if the funding did pass, ODOT wouldn’t have seen it for another year.

“The money would not have been realized until a year from now, so I’m not sure about the budget discrepancy that happened between Friday and July 1st, and I’m certainly open to hearing about it. But there would have been no money deposited between those times,” Levy said.

ODOT told the Problem Solvers in a statement that the department had been warning legislators for years about ongoing funding issues.

“ODOT cannot use federal funding for maintenance. State law prevents the agency from using project or transit money to pay for maintenance or agency operations,” the agency told KTVZ in a statement. “ODOT has taken voluntary reductions over the past six years, and no further reductions are available that won’t have consequences for Oregonians.”

The original transportation package was presented around a month ago and would have increased the state’s 40-cent gas tax by 15 cents.

Levy says the tax increases would have had devastating impacts on Oregonians. “The first package I couldn’t support – it was too much for working families. And I know what it’s like to get a big bill that you can’t pay.”

Lawmakers tried to pass a smaller bill Friday night, but also failed.

Locally, Cascade East Transit says it’s not currently affected, but added that if legislators continue to fail at passing funding, they could see impacts. 

The package would have increased the payroll tax from .1 to .3 percent, which CET says would have allowed an increase in services in Bend.

Levy said, “I know it’s not what people wanted, and it’s really not what I wanted. But again, I think a pause is the correct move.”

ODOT has been under fire by legislators earlier this year, after the department’s revenue came up $1 billion short. In an audit, ODOT told lawmakers the department’s system did not estimate correctly how much revenue they would receive in 2023-2024.

Below is a statement from ODOT about the layoffs:

For many years, ODOT has informed the Oregon Legislature that a structural revenue issue driven by flattening and declining gas tax revenue, inflation, and statutory restrictions on available funding would eventually force the agency to dramatically reduce its staffing and maintenance service levels if no intervention came forward. For the last three biennia, ODOT has taken progressively larger voluntary cuts to stay within budget.

Since last summer, ODOT has broadly shared that if the legislature did not address this shortfall during this legislative session, deeper cuts would have to start in the 2025-27 biennium.  

On Friday night, the legislature ended the session without passing a transportation package providing ODOT with either new funding, funding flexibility, or even an interim investment to stabilize services for the immediate upcoming biennium. As a result, ODOT will have to make deep and painful cuts starting in the next few weeks. 

ODOT cannot use federal funding for maintenance. State law prevents the agency from using project or transit money to pay for maintenance or agency operations. ODOT has taken voluntary reductions over the past six years, and no further reductions are available that won’t have consequences for Oregonians. The only way to balance the budget and live within available funding is to make deep and severe cuts. These cuts will harm Oregon’s transportation system, Oregon’s travelers, and the operational health of the agency. 

This week, ODOT will begin the layoff process. By the end of July, hundreds of positions will no longer be at ODOT. The agency is using vacancy savings wherever possible in order to minimize the number of layoffs but will still lose hundreds of current, hard-working employees. 

ODOT cannot solve this structural revenue issue on its own, and it won’t fix itself. Each year that passes, the vehicle fleet grows more efficient and uses less gas per mile driven. And with each year, the cost of doing business gets a little higher with inflation, while revenue sources stay flat. The only way out of this problem is for the legislature to dedicate additional funding to maintenance and agency operations or provide greater flexibility in how funds are spent.   

Oregon’s travelers will soon experience a less reliable transportation system. ODOT staff dedicated their professional lives to this agency and to supporting the traveling public. We will continue to do the best we can, with the resources we have, to keep Oregonians safe.

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Domestic Violence Solutions in Santa Barbara Shares Potential Impact of Federal Grant Funding Cuts

Patricia Martellotti

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – Domestic Violence Solutions (DVS) responds to the potential impact of federal grant fund cuts.

The organization provides safety, shelter, and support for those affected by domestic violence.

DVS also collaborates with community partners to raise awareness regarding the cause, prevalence and impact.

The non-profit is being forced to limit its services in the next six months by federal authorities.

This limitation will come as federal grants renew.

These limitations will include stopping all service to the undocumented, as well as to those whose gender is not as assigned at birth.

Loss of these grant funds will see half of the annual income for the organization cut in the next year.

The domestic violence solutions team hopes the community will support their efforts during his difficult time.

For more information, visit: https://dvsolutions.org/.

The Latest Breaking News, Weather Alerts, Sports and More Anytime On Our Mobile Apps. Keep Up With the Latest Articles by Signing Up for the News Channel 3-12 Newsletter.

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North Bannock Fire District conducting controlled burn at Portneuf Wellness Complex Tuesday

Sam Ross

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI)– The North Bannock Fire District will conduct a controlled burn at the Portneuf Wellness Complex all day Tuesday in preparation for Bannock County’s Fourth of July fireworks show on Friday.

The controlled burn will take place from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Fire crews will be burning vegetation around the fair grounds area to mitigate the risk of sparking a wildfire during the fireworks show.

Smoke and flames may be visible from the Portneuf Wellness Complex throughout the day on Tuesday, July 1. During the burn, the walking path next to the Bannock Fields will be closed.

For more information and updates, you can follow the Bannock County Facebook page.

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The firefighters killed and injured in Sunday’s attack had nearly 70 years of combined experience. Here’s what we know

CNN

CNN, BROADCASTIFY, KHQ, MARK LANTHROP, SPOKANE VALLEY FIRE DEPARTMENT, CITY OF COEUR D’ ALENE, KOOTENAI COUNTY FIRE AND RESCUE, CNN VIA WEBEX CISCO, FROM SOCIAL MEDIA

By Amanda Musa, CNN

(CNN) — Two firefighters were fatally shot and a third is seriously injured after investigators say a lone gunman opened fire on crews responding to a brush fire on Canfield Mountain on Sunday, near Coeur d’ Alene, Idaho.

The now-deceased suspect is believed to have started the fire intentionally to draw in and target responding firefighters, officials have said.

Within an hour of being deployed, firefighters reported being shot at as the blaze continued to burn.

Various agencies, including the Spokane County Sheriff’s Office, Idaho State Police and Coeur d’Alene Police Department, were caught in an exchange of fire for about 90 minutes, according to Kootenai County Sheriff Robert Norris.

The two firefighters killed in the fray have been identified as Kootenai County Fire and Rescue Battalion Chief Frank Harwood and Coeur d’Alene Fire Department Battalion Chief John Morrison.

The injured firefighter has been identified as Coeur d’Alene Fire Department engineer Dave Tysdal, according to fire officials. He is in critical condition.

“This wasn’t an event that we had trained for,” said Coeur d’Alene Fire Department Chief Tom Greif in a Monday news conference.

“We train every day for high-risk, low-frequency events that are dangerous in our profession, but we never imagined that we would be ambushed responding to a wildland incident at a command post,” Greif said.

With nearly 70 years of fire fighting experience combined, Harwood, Morrison and Tysdal have left an indelible impact on the Coeur d’Alene community, fire officials said.

Here’s what we know:

Frank Harwood, 42

A member of Kootenai County Fire and Rescue for 17 years, Harwood was married and had two children, Chief Christopher Way said.

Harwood was also a former Army National Guard combat engineer, Way said.

“Chief Harwood was a leader in our organization. He did an amazing job. He was a shift commander and he was well respected by his shift,” Way said Monday. “This loss is felt by so many, including all of the members of his shift.”

John Morrison, 52

Morrison served with the Coeur d’Alene Fire Department for more than 28 years and moved up the ranks in his department from firefighter to battalion chief, Greif said.

“These guys were hard workers,” said Gabe Eckert, president of the Coeur d’Alene Firefighters union. “They loved their families.”

Eckert shared his final memory with Morrison at Monday’s news conference, recalling a time when the pair smoked cigars during a rare lull at the fire station.

“We talked about being better fathers, we talked about being better leaders, talked about being better firefighters,” Eckert said.

“I just want to say I am so incredibly grateful that that gets to be my last memory with him.”

Dave Tysdal, 47

An engineer with the Coeur d’Alene Fire Department, Tysdal is recovering after undergoing two surgeries and is in critical condition, according to Greif.

Tysdal has been an engineer with the fire department for 23 years, Grief said.

“We thank everyone for their love and support,” a family statement read by Greif said.

“Dave is surrounded by his family, and he is able to open his eyes and the two surgeries have gone well,” the statement added.

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

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El Paso County Sheriff’s Office warns of jury dury scam

Celeste Springer

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — The El Paso County Sheriff’s Office (EPSO) says cases of a jury duty scam are on the rise.

EPSO says scammers are posing as law enforcement or court staff. They’re calling residents, saying that they have missed jury duty and have warrants out for their arrest. The scammers then pressure the victim to pay them through Bitcoin, prepaid cards, or wire transfers to clear up the warrants.

“They may mention a “signature verification” process, this is a fake legal procedure designed to make the scam sound official. In reality, it’s just a tactic to get you to comply with their demands, which usually involve paying a fine or handing over sensitive information,” the sheriff’s office wrote.

EPSO says law enforcement will never call to ask for payment for a warrant, and never ask for gift cards, Bitcoin, or wire transfers.

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Man escapes Costilla County Sheriff’s Office custody, now on the run

Celeste Springer

COSTILLA COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — The Costilla County Sheriff’s Office says a man has escaped custody.

According to the department, Dallas Hayes was being held on burglary charges when he escaped during the booking process yesterday morning.

The sheriff’s office says that at the time, he was wearing black pants, a white muscle shirt, and no shoes. He was last seen near Costilla Street and 8th Street in San Luis.

If you see him, call 911.

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Local leaders, health experts meet to discuss instability among immigrant communities

Gavin Nguyen

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – Leaders in the Coachella Valley met Tuesday to discuss how policy changes could affect immigrant communities.

Representatives from UnidosUS, the nation’s largest Hispanic civil rights and advocacy organization, hosted the discussion on Tuesday at the Mizell Center in Palm Springs. Several different organizations, ranging from healthcare companies to local advocacy groups attended the roundtable.

With President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” passing in the Senate, which includes potential cuts to Medicaid amounting to $1 trillion, the organization said “local community leaders and UnidosUS state leads will share timely insights and data on how this bill will impact families in Riverside County and across California.”

The new version of the bill will make its way back to the House of Representatives. If passed, those cuts could leave 80 million Americans’ healthcare coverage in jeopardy, according to Dr. Ilan Shapiro, Chief Health Correspondent at AltaMed.

Dr. Shapiro attended Tuesday’s discussion, and said of the cuts, “A lot of people ask me, ‘Why would I care if I’m not carrying Medicaid in my life?’ The reality is that 80 million people around the country actually have it. That means that someone close to us actually depends on it.”

Of that figure, 3.4 million Californians could lose their access to the program.

The discussion also comes after California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a state budget last week that included rolling back undocumented immigrants’ access to Medi-Cal. The state is no longer accepting new undocumented enrollees.

Stay with News Channel 3 for the latest.

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A plea deal is set to keep Bryan Kohberger locked up for life. Families of the Idaho victims have a range of emotions

CNN Newsource

By Hanna Park, Josh Campbell and Zoe Sottile, CNN

(CNN) — The grieving family of 21-year-old Kaylee Goncalves spent weeks waiting for an arrest in her killing. Since then, they and relatives of the three other University of Idaho students fatally stabbed on a late 2022 night in their off-campus home have endured a legal process punctuated by delay after delay.

Now, a month before the suspect’s murder trial was set to begin, the wait for justice is poised to end in what one Goncalves family member called a “shocking and cruel” plea deal that would remove the possibility of the death penalty.

“After more than two years, this is how it concludes — with a secretive deal and a hurried effort to close the case without any input from the victims’ families on the plea’s details,” the Goncalves family said in a statement shared with CNN.

The plea deal would bring an abrupt end to a case that has captured national attention since the four brutal killings rocked the small college town of Moscow. Bryan Kohberger, a 30-year-old former PhD student of criminology at nearby Washington State University, was charged in January 2023 with fatally stabbing Goncalves; Ethan Chapin and Xana Kernodle, both 20; and Madison Mogen, 21.

Under the deal, Kohberger will plead guilty to four counts of murder in exchange for the government dropping the death penalty, a person familiar with the matter told CNN. Goncalves family attorney Shanon Gray confirmed the deal to CNN, which has reached out to the families of Chapin and Mogen about the pending agreement.

“This isn’t what we should be doing,” Kaylee’s father, Steve Goncalves, told CNN’s Jim Sciutto on Tuesday, adding, “You don’t deal with terrorists and you don’t deal with people who kill your kids in their sleep. So we’ll never, we’ll never see this as justice.”

Xana’s father, Jeff Kernodle, also expressed his issues with the deal.

“I do not agree with this outcome and expressed my concerns before the deal was negotiated, especially regarding what I believed would be the best capital punishment,” Kernodle said in a statement Tuesday. “After nearly three years of waiting and being told there would be a trial, with evidence presented to convict him, I’m disappointed in the (prosecutors’) decision.”

A hearing in the case is scheduled for Wednesday at 1 p.m. ET in front of Judge Steven Hippler, a court document shows; it will deal with the plea agreement, a letter from the prosecutor to a victim’s family says, the Idaho Statesman reported. The Goncalves family has asked prosecutors to delay Wednesday’s hearing to give them more time to get to Boise, the family’s lawyer told the Associated Press.

Hippler, a Boise native, was appointed as a district judge by former Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter for the 4th Judicial District Court in 2013.

“Death row is the only place where they’re actually treated as true criminals. And it’s sad that this individual won’t be treated like a criminal,” Goncalves told Sciutto.

“The offer was made on a Sunday, and then two days later, we’re supposed to go to court on Fourth of July weekend? Can people not see what’s going on here?” Goncalves said. “This is ridiculous. Nothing moved in this case for a year. And then in three days, it’s over.”

Jury selection in Kohberger’s murder trial was set to begin August 4. Prosecutors previously indicated they would pursue the death penalty.

An abrupt end to a national saga

The Goncalves family wasn’t “even called about the plea” and merely “received an email with a letter attached,” they said in a social media post.

The letter, sent to the victims’ families from Moscow Prosecuting Attorney Bill Thompson, indicates Kohberger will likely be sentenced to life in prison if he pleads guilty and the deal requires him to waive his right to appeal, the Idaho Statesman reported.

Still, the Goncalves family blasted prosecutors’ “very unexpected” decision, writing in a short social media post: “We are beyond furious at the State of Idaho. They have failed us.”

By contrast, Madison Mogen’s father is choosing acceptance, he told the Idaho Statesman, saying the plea agreement would let his family avoid a trial and allow its wounds to keep healing.

If Kohberger were given a death sentence, he wouldn’t “have to spend decades thinking” about “how terrible (he) made the world,” Ben Mogen told “CBS Mornings.”

“We can actually put this behind us and not have these future dates and future things that we don’t want to have to be at, that we shouldn’t have to be at, that have to do with this terrible person,” Mogen told CBS. “We get to just think about the rest of our lives and have to try and figure out how to do it without Maddie and without the rest of the kids.”

Thompson’s office could not comment on news of the plea deal because of a wide-ranging gag order in the case, he told CNN. In the letter to the Goncalves family, the prosecutor defended the deal as “our sincere attempt to seek justice for your family,” arguing it will ensure Kohberger “will spend the rest of his life in prison,” the Statesman reported.

In a lengthier statement posted by the Goncalves family, Kaylee’s 18-year-old sister, Aubrie, took issue with the suddenness of the deal after a painfully long legal process, calling it “both shocking and cruel” to bring it to the families “just weeks before the scheduled trial.”

“Had this proposal come a year and a half ago, the families could have had time to process, discuss, and potentially come to terms with the idea of a life sentence – however difficult that may be,” the statement said.

The Goncalves family is “not asking for vengeance,” Aubrie wrote, but considers the possibility of life in prison an unfair outcome.

“Bryan Kohberger facing a life in prison means he would still get to speak, form relationships, and engage with the world. Meanwhile, our loved ones have been silenced forever,” she wrote.

The possibility of the death penalty has loomed large over the proceedings, with Kohberger’s defense team repeatedly arguing for it to be taken off the table.

“We all know he’s guilty,” Steve Goncalves told NewsNation. “There’s more than enough evidence, but it’s tough to put a community through this, and it could be bad for reputations and business identities, and there’s fallout, but this isn’t the will of the victims.”

“This is just one person making a decision,” he added, “and it doesn’t reflect what we were asking for.”

A frustrating legal journey

The victims’ families have lived through a sprawling case, starting with a wait for a suspect to be identified. For weeks, law enforcement released few details about the investigation. Then on December 30, 2022 – more than a month after the November 13 killings – Kohberger was arrested in his home state of Pennsylvania.

Kohberger’s arrest was based largely on DNA evidence, including a sample found on a knife sheath near one of the victims’ beds and DNA retrieved from trash outside the Kohberger family home, prosecutors said.

Since then, the legal case has been marked by delays, including when Kohberger kept silent during his May 2023 arraignment when a judge asked for his plea on the murder and burglary charges outlined in an indictment against him.

“Your honor, we are standing silent,” Kohberger’s attorney said before the judge entered not guilty pleas for him.

As the case proceeded, the defense team filed motions to suppress DNA evidence obtained through the forensic genealogy process and questioning the validity of other evidence, including cell phone records and the accuracy of a search warrant affidavit.

Kohberger’s trial was pushed back multiple times amid disputes over evidence and witnesses. Last September, it was moved from Latah County, where the crime took place, to the state capital of Boise.

Last year, the Goncalves family expressed its frustration at the repeated delays, saying the case had turned into a “hamster wheel of motions, hearings, and delayed decisions.”

Recent rulings narrowed Kohberger’s legal defense options heading into trial. The judge had barred the defense from submitting an official alibi, as no one could confirm Kohberger’s whereabouts at the time of the killings.

Last week, the judge rejected the defense’s attempt to present an “alternate perpetrator” theory. Kohberger’s lawyers had planned to argue one of four other people committed the murders, but the judge ruled there was no evidence beyond “pure speculation” to support the claim.

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

CNN’s Betul Tuncer, Alisha Ebrahimji, Jean Casarez, Lauren del Valle and Jason Kravarik contributed to this report.

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Innovative materials/last steps of reconstruction: Teton Pass reopens in time for Independence Day

Seth Ratliff

JACKSON, Wyo. (KIFI) — Following an intensive, round-the-clock effort by crews to pave the permanent roadway, the Teton Pass (Wyoming State Highway 22) has officially reopened to travelers after a weekend closure. The completion of the paving marks a significant milestone in the repairs since this critical section of road was devastated by the “Big Fill Slide” in June 2024.

The landslide severed this vital corridor connecting Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to Teton County, Idaho, causing considerable disruptions for travelers. Barring any unforeseen weather, Wyoming Department of Transportation (WYDOT) engineers and their contractors anticipate wrapping up the entire project just in time for the Fourth of July holiday.

“We may still have some seeding and reclamation, as well as a few punch list items to complete, but this project is…pretty much wrapped up,” stated Bob Hammond, WYDOT resident engineer.

Innovative new fill material

As Ames Construction puts the finishing touches on the project, new details are emerging about the innovative techniques used to rebuild the 100-foot-high embankment that was swept away. Rather than relying on traditional fill materials like stone or soil, WYDOT and its contractor opted to use a foamed glass aggregate manufactured by Aero Aggregates.

Courtesy: Areo Aggregates

According to the manufacturers, the material is super light – 85% lighter than traditional rock – and helps water drain away. This allowed them to transport the material from the production facility in Florida to the remote area in the Tetons quicker than traditional materials.

“The foamed glass aggregate provided by Aero Aggregates was the product of choice for the WYDOT ‘Big Fill Slide’ project on the Teton Pass,” said Pete Schexnayder of Ames Construction, the general contractor for the repair. “The product not only allowed continuous placement, but it was also less susceptible to weather conditions, decreased the weight of mass exerting forces on the existing material below the embankment, and was ecologically friendly for the surrounding national forest.”

Crews used about 60,000 cubic yards of the material to rebuild the 100-foot-high embankment, making the tallest road slope in the U.S. fixed with foamed glass.

Contractors also incorporated drains into the slope, an important step to prevent another foundation failure from massive snowmelt, like the one that destroyed the pass last year.

“Working with Ames Construction and the WYDOT engineering and implementation team on the Teton Pass repair was an exceptional collaborative experience,” explained Archie Filshill, CEO and Co-Founder of Aero Aggregates. “As a team of geotechnical engineers, we didn’t just deliver aggregate; we provided a comprehensive technical solution that addressed both weight and water drainage concerns in the slope reconstruction. Additionally, this project demonstrated our ability to quickly supply material to any location, even to the top of the Tetons.”

Courtesy: Aero Aggregates

Aero Aggregates makes this material from recycled glass that would otherwise go to landfills. The glass for this project came from recycled bottles and jars in Central Florida.

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