Locals get ready for Car Week traffic, regional airport welcoming many tourists

jose.romo

SEASIDE, Calif. (KION-TV) — Car enthusiasts are heading to the Peninsula for Car Week. Tourists traveling to the regional airport, as well as many others, are facing changes due to event-related road closures. 

Engines are revving and car week is in full effect, yet traffic safety should remain at the forefront of people’s minds. 

“Remember the number one reason for crashes that occur in California is speed, so the main thing that we want to really push for everyone is to be aware when you’re driving.”

With Car Week kicking off, CHP Officer Saul Perez says they are taking proactive measures to ensure the safety of drivers along the Peninsula. 

“Our main thing that we’re really pushing forward to is patience, patience, and just making sure that you get to your destination safely,” he adds.

Officer Perez added that some new officers are making their first ride-alongs during this week, taking Car Week as an opportunity to learn from higher-ranked training officers. 

“It’s a lot of pride serving my community,” says Saul Gomez, recent CHP academy graduate. “I know my dad works down the street; he’s worked there for 20, 30 years in agriculture. So I know the community, and it’s a good thing to be back.”

People in Seaside are seeing an increase in traffic with the numerous events drawing in more than 100 thousand tourists. Many of them prepare with alternative routes. 

“It’s always congested this time of year with the big event in town, and I think the key for me is just kind of schedule your day or your event or your routes kind of around the heavily congested traffic time,” says Curtis Price from Seaside.  

“Typically, we see about 160 aircraft parked here at the airport during that week, which is primarily a lot more than we normally will see, and we will often run out of space to park aircraft,” says Chris Morello, Interim Executive Director at the Monterey Regional  Airport.  

With traffic rolling along Highway 68, Monterey Regional Airport staff share that people should allow for ample time for arrival at the Monterey terminal.

“Not that it’ll be longer wait lines here once you get into the terminal, but definitely getting to the terminal could be a little bit more problematic because of the traffic, and we’re off of 68, off of Garden Road, there’ll be a lot of events going on in this area.”

Chris Morello with the Monterey Regional Airport adds that Sunday and Monday are usually the busiest days for air travel. She says, however, that’s not the case for commercial aircraft, as the majority of travel comes from general private aircraft aviation.

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Brawley couple claims racial profiling by Border Patrol

Karina Bazarte

JACUMBA, Calif. (KYMA, KECY) – A married couple from Brawley are going viral after claiming they were racially profiled when Border Patrol stopped them.

The couple says they were on their way to the dentist in San Diego, but decided to stop in the area Jacumba last week.

That’s when George and Esmeralda Doilez who are U.S. citizens were stopped by a Border Patrol agent.

“We saw white trucks that were not marked either going back and forth but we didn’t think anything of it because we are American Citizens why should we be scared in our own county,” said George.

The couple said the agents were first wearing masks and lower it when he started talking.

George says the agent claimed he was looking for an undocumented person in the area and he was doing U-turns. That’s when his wife decided to record the whole encounter.

“It all happened in the first ten minutes where he switched it came from an illegal Mexican on the loose…a drug dealer activity going on and possible smuggling, and then it turned into I’m just out here for a YouTube experience and called me a YouTuber several times, and we have never had a YouTube account till now,” George shared.

Esmeralda says she was scared because she didn’t know what was going to happen.

“The guy next to me was so jumpy I did not know. I had my seatbelt on and I kept thinking, ‘Okay, if they do mash the window and they try to pull me out I have my seatbelt on and I am going to get chocked and I didn’t want to get my belt off because oh she is trying to do something,” said Esmeralda.

In the video, you can see George pulls out his I.D. and puts it on the window for the agent to see. The agent then sees the I.D.

George says Border Patrol called a K9 unit to search their car and found a small amount of legally purchased marijuana.

After the search, in the video you can hear the agent saying he can seize their vehicle and ticket them for having cannibas, instead let the couple go off with a warning.

The couple believes they were racially profiled and that other people could also fall victim. .

“If you are a person of color brown, yellow, pink…whatever you are, if you don’t fit their description and their ethnicity you are in trouble and at risk of being searched,” said George.

The encounter lasted for about 40 minutes, and Border Patrol has not commented on the stop.

Watch the full YouTube video here.

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New fire on Deschutes National Forest west of Sunriver, Lolo Butte stopped fast at less than an acre

Barney Lerten

SUNRIVER, Ore. (KTVZ ) — With everyone watching closely for any new smoke amid very hot weather, a new wildfire was halted quickly on the Deschutes National Forest west of Sunriver and Lolo Butte late Monday afternoon.

Fire 820 was reported around 4:30 p.m., and forward progression was stopped before 5 p.m., with mop-up operations underway, Ludie Bond, public information officer for Central Oregon Fire Management Service, told KTVZ News

Here’s the fact sheet issued minutes earlier for the 820 Fire by COFMS:

Wildfire Fact Sheet – 0820

Start Date: August 11 at 4:30 p.m.

Location: 43°51’08.3″N 121°36’46.2″W

 North of LaPine, 8-10 miles west of Sunriver, 1.4 miles west of Lolo Butte

Jurisdiction: Deschutes National Forest

Fire Size: Approximately .5 acres 

Cause: Under investigation

Fuels: heavy timber with spotting and torching

Structures: no structures threatened

Fire Crews/Resources: 3 engines, 2 dozers, air attack, 1 Type 1 helicopter, 2 crews, and 1 water tenders

Visit the official source for wildfire information in Central Oregon at centraloregonfire.org for wildfire updates or follow fire information on X/Twitter @CentralORfire. Call 9-1-1 to report a wildfire. For smoke and air quality information, visit fire.airnow.gov.

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Oregon estimates $15 billion Oregon impact from Trump budget cuts; Governor Kotek decries ‘needless, callous hardship’

Barney Lerten

SALEM. Ore. (KTVZ) — Governor Tina Kotek announced Monday that the budget reconciliation bill backed by the Trump Administration and passed by Republicans in Congress is projected to cut $15 billion in federal funding from Oregon for health insurance coverage, food benefits and other programs over the next six years.

The announcement is the result of a preliminary analysis by the State of Oregon’s Chief Financial Officer in coordination with state agencies upon the passage of President Trump’s budget early in July. The analysis may change, pending detailed federal guidelines to implement the bill, the governor said in a news release posted here in full.

In response to the esteimate, Governor Kotek stated:

“The Trump Administration and Republicans in Congress have betrayed American children and families, who will become sicker, hungrier, and less prosperous because of President Trump’s budget bill. Oregonians will see less of their federal tax dollars coming back to our state for things they count on. Furthermore, President Trump and Congress knew that state governments cannot pay for this substantial gap in services, but went ahead and did it anyway.

“I am going to work with Oregon lawmakers and community partners to do all that we can to stand up for Oregonians and get through this needless, callous hardship. I will continue to hold the line and push back as Oregon values are under threat. I hope Oregonians will stand with me as we fight this together.”

Below is a high-level table of the most impacted agencies, in millions over the next three state budget cycles (biennia):

Additional preliminary analyses of impacts to Oregon state agencies can be found here.

The Governor will convene state lawmakers and key stakeholders who work with or represent populations most at risk from the Trump Administration’s budget cuts to consider possible strategies to reduce impact to people, and her office will continue to communicate impacts as they come into focus through implementation.

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Police use stun gun, pepper spray on man accused of kicking cop, touching film equipment

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Lake Ozark police had to use a stun gun and pepper spray to subdue a man accused of kicking an officer and touching film equipment that was not his.

Justin Carr, of Carthage, Missouri, was charged on Saturday in Miller County with third-degree attempted assault. Court filings show that he posted a $10,000 bond. A court date is scheduled for 9 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 10.

The probable cause statement says Lake Ozark police officers were in the 1200 block of Bagnell Dam Boulevard for an unrelated call when a member of a film production company told Carr to not touch their film equipment and to step away. Police wrote that Carr appeared to be drunk.

He was allegedly asked several times to step away, but “escalated” the situation and police used a stun gun to try to subdue him, the statement says. An officer had scrapes and cuts on his hand from trying to arrest Carr, the statement says.

Carr then allegedly wished death on the officer and his family before kicking the cop in his chest while he was being put in the back of the patrol car, the statement says. Carr started to kick the back window and cage of the vehicle and police had to use pepper spray to get him to stop, the statement says.  

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Man whose sentence was commuted by Biden now in Cole County Jail, awaits hearing Wednesday

Haley Swaino

COLE COUNTY, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Columbia man who was released from federal custody this summer after his sentence was commuted earlier this year by then-President Joe Biden is now in the Cole County Jail.

Malcolm Redmon, 42, is being held at the jail without bond on a U.S. Marshal hold, jail records indicate. Redmon appeared on the Boone County Jail’s roster on Friday evening. Capt. Brian Leer, of the Boone County Sheriff’s Office, wrote in an email that Redmon was picked up from the Boone County Jail Monday morning.

He was being held there on a federal detainer based probation, according to previous reporting, though the violation has not been stated by officials. Leer said the Columbia Police Department took Redmon into custody. CPD told ABC 17 News on Monday it could not provide additional details surrounding Redmon’s arrest.

An initial appearance on revocation proceedings and preliminary revocation hearing is scheduled for 11:15 a.m. Wednesday at the U.S. District Court.

Redmon was sentenced to 24 years in 2016 after pleading guilty to being involved in a cocaine-selling ring in Mid-Missouri, according to previous reporting. Redmon was one of 27 people arrested in 2014 throughout Missouri and Illinois. He was one of nearly 2,500 people convicted of nonviolent drug charges to have their sentence commuted by former President Biden.

He was released from federal custody a decade early on July 16, according to previous reporting.

Leer told ABC 17 News on Saturday afternoon the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri issued the warrant for Redmon’s recent arrest. The court’s office told ABC 17 News until he appears in court, no details can be shared.

Chief Magistrate Judge Willie J. Epps, Jr. ordered the public defender’s office to represent Redmon.

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Fremont County man who assisted brother with prison escape gets deferred sentence

KRDO News

FREMONT COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — A Fremont County man who was accused of helping his brother escape from prison has received a deferred sentence, according to court documents.

Video, featured above, shows the escape and arrest.

On Monday, Kyle Vanvliet was sentenced to a 2-year deferred sentence and 2 years of probation, according to documents.

Kyle Vanvliet (Source: Fremont County Sheriff’s Office)

Vanvliet’s arrest affidavit stated that, back in June of 2024, he helped his brother Kegan escape from the Fremont County Detention Center by meeting him at a nearby gas station and giving Kegan his car.

In an interview with a detective, Kyle said that he didn’t go to the gas station to help his brother. He said that he always sat at that gas station.

At the time of his escape from prison, his brother Kegan Vanvliet was accused of attempted murder.

Kegan Vanvliet (Source: Fremont County Sheriff’s Office)

Authorities say Kegan Vanvliet led them on a manhunt, which ended later about 40 miles away in Colorado Springs.

According to court records, back in March, Kegan was sentenced to six years for his part in the prison escape case.

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Commerce Bank announces baseball and softball equipment collection drive

Ryan Eslinger

ST. JOSEPH, Mo (News-Press NOW) — Commerce Bank announced a baseball and softball equipment drive to support the “Commerce Bank: Helping Kids Take the Field” campaign Monday afternoon.

Commerce Bank focuses on helping people and businesses solve financial challenges so that they can focus on what matters most.

The event aims to benefit youth baseball and softball players in T-ball through High School in the St. Joseph community providing equipment for kids who may not have it.

Commerce Bank is partnering up with Pony Express Baseball, the Kansas City Royals, and Royals rookie standout/St. Joseph native Noah Cameron to help with the event.

Commerce Bank is accepting donations of new or gently used baseball and softball equipment at all of Commerce’s 45 branches around the Kansas City and St. Joseph communities.

The following equipment can be accepted:

Baseballs

Bats

Batting gloves

Equipment bags

Fielding gloves

Hats

Helmets

Socks

Uniform pants

The event will be from 1:30-3 pm on Thursday Aug. 14 in the Commerce Bank Branch at 3303 Ashland Avenue in St Joseph.

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Pulaski County woman accused of providing poor living conditions for children

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Pulaski County woman was charged with three misdemeanors after her children allegedly faced poor living conditions.

Aleah Gretch was charged with three counts of second-degree endangering the welfare of a child. A criminal summons was issued on Friday. An initial court appearance is scheduled for 9 a.m. Friday, Sept. 12.  

A social worker alleged that children were residing in unlivable conditions. Photographs allegedly showed “the residence with piles of garbage, insects, human feces, and other filthy conditions in every room of the residence,” the probable cause statement says.

Two of the children were interviewed at their school, and they allegedly told interviewers that they were told to lie about the state of their home.

Law enforcement went to the home, noticed a strong smell along with trash, feces and other debris all around the home’s floor and walls, the statement says. Children’s Division took custody of the children and brought them to their father’s residence, the statement says.

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Yuma High School’s second year Army JROTC program continues to grow

Manoah Tuiasosopo

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – In just its second year, The Army JROTC program at Yuma High School is showing impressive growth.

The Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps focuses on leadership development, discipline, and community service.

The program requires students to maintain strong academics, participate in drill and ceremony, and serve on color guard teams.

JROTC offers a wide range of benefits whether students plan to pursue a military career or simply want to build confidence and character.

Yuma Union High School District (YUHSD) says the program was created in response to the student’s requests.

“That was from student demand. It’s not easy to get a ROTC or JROTC in our schools. Students were interested in it. It’s one of the most popular classes at Yuma High School and it will continue to grow as well,” says Eric Patten, the Chief Communications Officer at YUHSD.

The district hopes the program can grow to compete at the national level alongside other JROTC programs like the Rifle Team at Kofa High School.

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