Jefferson City man pleads guilty to 2024 stabbing, sentenced to 15 years in prison

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Jefferson City man who was originally charged with attempted murder in a stabbing last year has pleaded guilty to a lesser charge.

Fredy Navichoc-Putzul, 24, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to first-degree assault. He was originally charged with first-degree attempted murder and armed criminal action. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison and was given credit for time served. He is currently being held at the Cole County Jail.

Court documents in previous reporting say Navichoc-Putzul stabbed the victim in the neck multiple times and bit his hand on March 4, 2024. Cole County Sheriff’s deputies found a knife without a handle at the residence in the 6900 block of Meadowbrook Drive.

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Monterey City Manager Hans Uslar announces retirement

Makenzie Bennett

MONTEREY, Calif. (KION-TV) — After seven years as city manager, Hans Uslar has announced his retirement in December of 2025.

With 28 years of working for the city, Uslar initiated the implementation of the City’s Fiscal Healthy Response Plan, leading the city’s team through the unknowns of the COVID-19 pandemic.

With a commitment to building a strong workplace culture and professional development support, Uslar says he’ll remain dedicated to a smooth and effective transition.

“Our city employees represent the very best of public service. Their dedication, professionalism andreliability – 365 days a year, 24/7– are what truly keeps our city thriving. I have always beendeeply honored to work alongside such an exceptional team,” said Uslar.

From starting his career as a manager analyst for the City of Monterey in 1997, he flourished through a multitude of titles before his role as the city manager in 2018.

“Monterey is a remarkable place to live and serve, and I look forward to continuing tobe part of this special place,” he said.

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Cast Members of the “The Addams Family” Preview Performances Happening This Weekend

Alissa Orozco

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – The Addams Family is coming to a local stage for a set of ghoul-tastic performances this weekend in Santa Barbara!

The theatre group, Stage Left, is a 4-week summer camp that teaches kiddos how to audition, dance, sing and create a musical. Throughout the weeks during the program, they rehearse and practice to prepare for their big performance.

Students from Stage Left will be performing in “The Addams Family,” the beloved classic about America’s darkest family!

Two of the play’s stars, Hailey Elizabeth and Chance Challen, joined your News Channel to give viewers a sneak peak at this weekend’s shows.

“It’s definitely exciting and nerve wracking because it’s like the show is almost here it’s definitely coming together very fast and quickly and I’m very excited to get to perform it,” said Elizabeth, who plays Pugsley.

Both performers play the role of Pugsley, giving them a chance to practice and learn together.

“Me and Hailey get to watch each other and watch each other perform, so we get to sort of like see what we do differently and like sort of work on it together so it’s kind of fun,” said Challen, who also plays Pugsley!

You can watch Stage Left’s adaptation of “The Addams Family” this weekend, July 26th to July 27th. They have two performances daily at 2pm and 7pm at San Marcos High School in Santa Barbara.

Visit Stage Left’s website for more information.

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The U.S. Coast Guard Assists with a Chopper After a Boat Crash in Carpinteria Tuesday night

John Palminteri

CARPINTERIA, Calif. – A dramatic scene played out at Carpinteria State Beach Tuesday night when a sailboat crashed ashore.

There was one person on board, who witnesses say was able to get into a smaller “dingy.”

The emergency came after the boat reportedly lost power and drifted, eventually coming ashore east of Linden Avenue and west of the oil industry pier.

The man on board was assisted to shore with the help of the Carpinteria-Summerland Fire Department water rescue team. They arrived with jet skis.

TowBoatUS-Ventura inspected the vessel Wednesday morning and is preparing to take it back out at high tide. It is still sea worthy and does not have any major damage that would sink the vessel.

The incident was very loud when the chopper arrived from the  Coast Guard Forward Operating Base (FOB) from Ventura County. It hovered over the scene and provided a spotlight.

Many campers came out from the nearby campgrounds at the waterfront.

The area was cordonedoff bu t many people got a close up look.

(More details, photos and video will be added later today)

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From ‘you’re a joke’ to ‘I’ve forgiven you’: Families of Idaho murder victims address Bryan Kohberger at sentencing

CNN

CNN

By Eric Levenson, Dakin Andone, Maureen Chowdhury, Antoinette Radford, CNN

(CNN) — The family of Kaylee Goncalves, one of the four University of Idaho students killed by Bryan Kohberger in 2022, called him a “joke,” “loser,” and “as dumb as they come” in a day of searing victim impact statements.

“If you hadn’t attacked them in their sleep, in the middle of the night like a pedophile, Kaylee would have kicked your fucking ass,” her sister Alivea Goncalves said to him, earning a round of applause from some of those gathered in the Boise, Idaho, courtroom.

The impact statements from the victims’ families were part of a dramatic sentencing hearing that represented the final opportunity for the families to speak in court and reflect on their loved ones, Kohberger and the case’s controversial plea deal.

Kohberger, too, had an opportunity to speak to the court and answer the question that remains frustratingly unclear: Why?

Yet he was as unknowable as ever. Wearing an orange prison outfit, Kohberger kept a flat affect throughout the hearing and did not appear to react to any of the statements. And when he had his turn to speak to the court, he said only three words: “I respectfully decline.”

Earlier this month, the former criminology graduate student admitted to fatally stabbing four University of Idaho students – Goncalves, Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Madison Mogen – in their off-campus home during the overnight hours of November 13, 2022.

He pleaded guilty to burglary and four counts of first-degree murder, and in exchange, prosecutors agreed to a sentence of life in prison, taking the death penalty off the table.

Goncalves family directly addresses killer

Speaking directly to Kohberger, Alivea Goncalves said her sister would “call you exactly what you are: sociopath, psychopath, murderer.”

She called Kohberger “defendant” and asked a series of questions she said “reverberate violently” in her own head.

“Sit up straight when I talk to you,” she said. “How was your life right before you murdered my sister? Did you prepare for the crime before leaving your apartment? Please detail what you were thinking and feeling at the time.”

“If you were really smart, do you think you’d be here right now?”

She dismissed him as a sociopath, a psychopath and a delusional and pathetic loser. He is “as dumb as they come,” she said, adding that “no one thinks that you are important.”

“The truth is, you’re basic,” she said.

“Let me be very clear: Don’t ever try to convince yourself you matter just because someone finally said your name out loud. I see through you,” she said.

Steve Goncalves, the victim’s father, turned the lectern to directly face Kohberger in his impact statement.

“The world’s watching because of the kids, not because of you. Nobody cares about you. … In time, you will be nothing but two initials, forgotten to the wind,” he said.

He called Kohberger a “joke” and described how easy it was to track him down.

“Police officers tell us within minutes they had your DNA. Like a calling card. You were that careless. That foolish. That stupid. Masters degree? You’re a joke. Complete joke,” he said.

A roommate explains her survivor’s guilt

Bethany Funke, a roommate of the four slain students, wrote a statement – read aloud by a friend – about her survivor’s guilt and her regrets about not immediately calling 911.

“I was still out of it and still didn’t know what happened. If I had known, I of course, would have called 911 right away,” Funke wrote. “I still carry so much regret and guilt for not knowing what had happened and not calling right away, even though I understand, it wouldn’t have changed anything.”

“That was the worst day of my life, and I know it always will be,” she added.

“Why me? Why did I get to live and not them?”

Another roommate says she was ‘shattered’

Dylan Mortensen, who also lived with the victims, read aloud her statement through tears, describing what the perpetrator had taken away from all of them.

“He didn’t just take their lives, he took the light they carried into every room. He took away how they made everyone feel safe, loved, and full of joy. He took away the ability for me to tell them that I love them and that I’m so proud of them.

“He took away who they were becoming, and the futures they were going to have. He took away birthdays, graduations, celebrations, and all the memories that we were supposed to make,” she said. “All of it is gone. And all the people who loved them are just left to carry that weight forever.”

“He didn’t just take them from the world, he took them from me. My friends, my people who felt like my home. The people I looked up to and adored more than anyone. He took away my ability to trust the world around me. What he did shattered me in places I didn’t know could break.”

Mortensen said she has panic attacks “that slam into me like a tsunami out of nowhere” and send her heart racing.

She also said she had a dream last year in which she was able to say goodbye to her slain roommates.

“I told them I won’t be able to see you again, so I need to tell you goodbye. They all kept asking why, and all I could say was I can’t tell you but I have to,” she said. “When I woke up, I felt shattered and heartbroken but also strangely grateful, like maybe in some way that dream gave us the goodbye we never got. Still, no dream can replace them, and no goodbye will ever feel finished.”

Mogen’s parents and grandmother reflect on her loss

Scott Laramie, Mogen’s stepfather, read a statement on behalf of him and Mogen’s mother, Karen Laramie, saying their daughter was “our gift of life, our purpose and our hope.”

Laramie said the tragic loss of their daughter has left a “vast emotional wound” that will “never heal.”

“Since Maddie’s loss, there’s emptiness in our hearts, home and family. An endless void,” Laramie said. “We will grow old grow without our only child.”

Ben Mogen, Mogen’s father, said she was much more than his only child.

“She was the only great thing I ever really did. And the only thing I was ever really proud of.”

He described struggling with addiction and substance abuse and how her daughter helped him.

“When I wasn’t wanting to live anymore, she was what would keep me from not caring anymore. Knowing that she was out there and was such a beautiful person kept me alive in a lot of rough moments,” he said.

Mogen’s grandmother, Kim Cheeley, told a charming story about how Mogen, her first granddaughter, gave her an unusual nickname.

Mogen, then a 1.5-year-old, called her grandmother the same way she mispronounced “banana” – “ba-deedle-deedle.” From then on, Cheeley became known as “Deedle,” she said.

A couple of years before her death, Mogen bought Cheeley a necklace with “Deedle and Maddie” engraved on it, which has become one of her “treasured” possessions, she said. Following her granddaughter’s death, Cheeley added an angel wing to the necklace, she told the court.

“It’s one of my treasured possessions,” she said.

Several members of the family now have an angel wing tattoo in honor of her granddaughter, Cheeley said.

“I wanted mine where I could see and touch it often,” she said, rubbing her left forearm.

‘I have forgiven you,’ Kernodle’s aunt tells Kohberger

Kim Kernodle, the aunt of Xana Kernodle, said the loss of her niece at first spurred anger within their family but recently has brought them closer.

“You united us with your actions,” she said. “We have family and friends now that we never knew we had.”

Unlike many of those who spoke in court Wednesday, she offered Kohberger absolution.

“Bryan, I am here today to tell you that I have forgiven you, because I can no longer live with that hate in my heart, and for me to become a better person, I have forgiven you,” she said.

“And anytime you want to talk and tell me what happened, you have my number. I’m here, no judgment, because I do have questions that I want you to answer. I’m here. I’ll be that one that will listen to you, OK?”

Jeff Kernodle, Xana Kernodle’s father, offered his own regrets. On the night the students were killed, he said he almost went to his daughter’s home but he had been drinking, and she told him not to drink and drive. Now, he said, he wishes that he had.

“You would have had to deal with me,” he told Kohberger.

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42-year-old has life-threatening injuries after getting hit by vehicle in Moberly

Ryan Shiner

Editor’s note: The time of the crash was updated after law enforcement sent an updated press release.

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 42-year-old pedestrian in Moberly was flown to University Hospital with life-threatening injuries on Tuesday night after they were hit by a vehicle, a press release from the Moberly Police Department says.

The release says officers were called at 9:13 p.m. to the 1000 block of North Morley Street for a call about a vehicle hitting a pedestrian.

A 60-year-old man drove a vehicle northbound when he hit the pedestrian. Additional identifying information about either person — including their names — or the vehicle was not immediately available.

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EPA and Vistra Corp. reach agreement for urgent battery cleanup at Moss Landing

Makenzie Bennett

MONTEREY, Calif. (KION-TV) — The EPA (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) reached an agreement with Vistra Corp. to remove and dispose of the batteries affected by the fire last January at Moss Landing.

Under the EPA’s oversight, Vistra will reduce the risk of another fire by conducting safe and harmless battery removal.

“We’ve arrived at a key milestone in the Moss Landing response: an agreement that allows our EPA experts to ensure the safe removal and proper disposal of these dangerous damaged batteries,” said EPA Pacific Southwest Region Administrator Josh F.W. Cook.

Vistra is required to submit detailed work plans to the EPA while taking comprehensive safety measures to ensure the protection of nearby residents and workers throughout the cleanup.

They will also be required to implement air monitoring and air sampling surrounding the property during removal. A private firefighting company will accompany them on site at all times.

This cleanup follows the battery plant fire that broke out earlier this year in Moss Landing. Vistra was considered a potential responsible party and must take on the costs of the removal and disposal.

Public access to track updates can be found here: https://www.epa.gov/ca/moss-landing-vistra-battery-fire

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Vitalant Hosts Summer Blood Drives to combat seasonal shortage in Yuma

Skylar Heisey

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – As summer temperatures soar across Arizona, the state’s largest nonprofit blood provider is sounding the alarm on a seasonal blood shortage, and calling on Yuma residents to help.

Cameron Klug, a representative from Vitalant, joined me to discuss the organization’s upcoming efforts to meet local hospital needs through community blood donations.

“Vitalant supplies the majority of Arizona’s hospitals with the blood they need to save lives,” Klug said. “Here in Yuma, we’re the sole nonprofit blood provider to Onvida Health, which is why we host regular blood drives in the area.”

Why Summer is a Struggle

Blood donations typically drop during the summer, and Arizona is hit especially hard.

“Our extreme heat plays a role, but the bigger issue is that many of our donors are either teenagers or winter visitors,” Klug explained. “Teen donors, who make up one in every six donations statewide, are out of school, and our generous winter visitors are out of state.”

With fewer donors available, Vitalant is urging locals, especially those who have never donated or haven’t in a while, to step up.

Upcoming Summer Blood Drive

Vitalant is hosting a large three-day “Summer Life Savers” Blood Drive in partnership with local media at the Yuma Main Library:

July 31

August 1

August 2

Residents can sign up to donate at vitalant.org/yuma. Every donation could save up to three lives, and first-time donors will also learn their blood type.

What to Bring

Donors are reminded to:

Bring a photo ID

Drink plenty of water

Eat a full meal before donating

Cameron emphasized that all blood types are needed, but O-negative, known as the universal red cell donor type, is always in especially high demand.

“You’re always going to be someone’s type,” he said. “Whether you’re B positive or A negative, your blood could be the one that saves a life here in Yuma.”

For more information or to schedule an appointment, visit vitalant.org/yuma.

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Vado sisters share flooded homes, worries of more rain with ABC-7

Nicole Ardila

ABC-7 met with two sisters from Vado, N.M. whose homes got flooded overnight Wednesday — they shared what their homes look like and their biggest concerns.

Rosa Emilia Olasio and her sister, who are also neighbors opened their doors to ABC-7 and showed the now muddy rooms their homes are filled with.

Their items, all scrambled, had to be moved up to high ground once they saw water seeping in.

Rosa said in Spanish, that she didn’t sleep at all that night, as she was worried about her home.

“My niece and her children — the poor things, because all the water got inside. All their things floating around,” said Rosa, emotional from the overnight experience. “I hope it doesn’t rain again, we ask that God to help us, and that the water stops.”

Her sister rushed to grab a bag filled with important documents. She was worried about her bedroom, as there’s a door that leads to her front yard — which was flooded with rising waters.

On Wednesday morning, ABC-7 found the sister walking around the residential area with a broom-stick trying to unclog drains in the area — where water then started to flow.

The sister said also in Spanish, that she hopes the rain stops.

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Audrain County man charged in fatal DWI crash arrested

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

An Audrain County man who was charged earlier this month in a fatal crash has been arrested, according to a press release from the Mexico Department of Public Safety.

Joshua Frye, 22, of Mexico, Missouri, was charged with driving while intoxicated while causing two or more deaths and misdemeanor reckless driving. Police wrote in the release that he was arrested Tuesday afternoon in the 1300 block of Paris Road in Mexico after he was released from University Hospital.

The release says that first responders were called to a crash at 6:39 a.m. June 12 in the 4800 block of South Clark Street. Two people — Kristain Pritchett, 22, and Austin Terry, 27 – died in the crash, according to previous reporting.

Court documents in previous reporting indicate that both people were in the car with Frye. Court documents allege that Frye drove a Kia Soul southbound on Clark Street when he lost control of the vehicle and crashed into a Chrysler in the northbound lane.

A confined docket hearing is scheduled for 10 a.m. Thursday at the Audrain County Courthouse.

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