IFPD invites community to National Night Out

News Release

The following is a news release from the Idaho Falls Police Department

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — The Idaho Falls Police Department is inviting community members to attend National Night Out on Tuesday night, August 5th. National Night Out is an annual national community-building effort that promotes police-community partnerships and neighborhood camaraderie to make our communities safer, more caring places to live.  

On Tuesday, August 5th from 5 – 8 p.m., Idaho Falls Police Officers will be at Tautphaus Park to meet with Idaho Falls families and community members. IFPD will have officers from the Patrol Bureau, the SWAT team, K9 unit, Unmanned Aerial Systems (Drone) Team, the Idaho Falls Region 7 Bomb Squad, Emergency Communications Officers (dispatch), and other areas of the department in attendance. The IFPD Crime Scene Investigations team will be handing out Child ID Kits. Officers will bring Patrol vehicles, a SWAT vehicle, and other specialty equipment for “show-and-tell.” 

These opportunities to see police vehicles and equipment up close and to meet officers are popular with children, families, and adults. Each year, National Night Out proves to be a great opportunity for education, sharing information and relationship building. 

Papa’s Knot-ty Pretzels will also be there with savory pretzel confections for 250 people.

For more information about National Night Out, and future Idaho Falls Police Department events, follow IFPD on social media!

WHAT: Idaho Falls Police Department – National Night Out 

WHEN: Tuesday, August 5th, 2024, 5:00 – 8:00 p.m. 

WHERE: Tautphaus Park, on the green space near Rogers Street and Fountain View Drive.  

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Summer Life Savers Blood Drive continues to support locals

Eduardo Morales

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – A blood drive is being held to support locals and more Arizonans in need.

The Summer Life Savers Blood Drive by Vitalant will be at the Yuma Main Library from July 31 to August 2.

News 11, ABC 5 and Telemundo 3 are partnering with Vitalant to bring this blood drive to Yuma. 

Anyone who donates blood on those dates will be entered to win a 2025 VW Taos S.

The vehicle prize was donated by the Valley Volkswagen Dealers.

You can make an appointment to donate blood by going to their website or calling (877) 258-4825.

You can also find more information about the blood drive here.

Vitalant previously held a blood drive in winter 2024, which collected enough blood to impact over 300 lives.

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Portneuf District Library hosts sizzling “Summer Chill Out”

Sam Ross

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) — The Portneuf District Library celebrated the nearing end of summer today with a “Summer Chill Out” party that drew hundreds of community members. The event was packed with activities designed to help everyone cool down and have a blast.

Party-goers enjoyed free popsicles and snow cones, participated in a variety of kids’ activities, and delighted in the refreshing spray of a foam cannon. Children’s Librarian Amanda Bowden called the event a perfect way to wind down the summer season.

“We’ve had a great turnout. We’ve had a fun, fun summer. So we’re really excited that this many people came out and are just having a blast,” said Bowden.

While the summer party may be winding down, the Portneuf District Library is still collecting completed summer reading forms. Be sure to turn yours in for a chance to win dozens of exciting prizes by visiting the Portneuf District Library at 52-10 Stuart Avenue in Chubbuck. Or click HERE.

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Man, found incompetent after admitting to dragging woman to her death, released from jail

Bradley Davis

Editor’s note: This article contains an emotional recounting of the crime from the victim’s family. Reader discretion is advised.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – After over a month of delayed court action, Joel Lang has been released from jail as a free man Friday afternoon after admitting to killing Kristy Kerst with his car last November.

Before dismissing the case, the El Paso County judge turned to the family of Kerst and said, “It is not my place to criticize the legislator,” before apologizing to the family for the pain this ruling would cause. He then turned to Lang and clarified that he wasn’t discrediting Lang’s defense.

“I will never forget hearing her scream as he hit (my mom),” Kerst’s daughter Britany Visage said. “I ran around the back side of the vehicle, and I was trying to open the passenger side door and I was begging them to stop, and I saw my mom trapped under the van. I ran alongside the van as long as I could until I had to let go, and I fell.”

Visage continues, “I ran back to where my mom was initially struck, and people were running at me from every direction. For a second, I thought maybe my mom was okay and that bystanders might have taken her into the McDonald’s, but then I realized, everybody was looking behind me, and my mom’s body was 350 feet down the road.”

In June, the judge dismissed all charges against Lang after two doctors evaluated him as too incompetent to stand trial, and “his competency could not be restored.”

“What kind of justice system is this? It’s a joke,” said Katie Gibbons, who was a bystander and rushed in to help Kerst after Lang ran her over in November. “You don’t give someone who’s mentally incompetent a driver’s license, and if you do, and they do something like this, someone needs to pay the price.”

“How do you know what to do in the car? How do you know what green means? How do you know what red means? How do you know the signs?” Kerst’s daughter, Hanna Kerst, said.

Under Colorado’s current competency laws, that diagnosis requires a judge to dismiss all charges, regardless of the level of offense, according to the district attorney’s office of Michael J. Allen.

“One of the doctors asked him, ‘What does being incompetent mean?’ His response was that ‘this problem all goes away,’ and in my soul, I feel like this is not a problem to go away,” Visage said.

Criminal Defense Attorney Jeremy Loew told KRDO13 the legal requirement to dismiss all charges in a case like Lang’s takes all power away from the judge to pass judgment. This is why Lang cannot be forced to stay in a mental health hospital, despite being ruled incompetent.

Lang’s case is not the only one bringing scrutiny down on Colorado’s incompetency laws.

Other cases with similar threads

In a different case, Arapahoe County said it plans to drop charges against an Aurora man, Solomon Galligan, after he tried to kidnap an 11-year-old boy. It’s the fourth time since 2018 that he’s had charges dropped because of incompetence.

The Arapahoe County District Attorney’s office tells KRDO13 they will not release Galligan to the public, but only because he consented to be placed in inpatient care. The District Attorney said his agreement was key in keeping him off the streets.

The judge in Lang’s case delayed court action (called a “stay”) until today’s review setting so the court liaison could arrange mental health services to help Lang’s transition. In court, he removed the stay and officially dismissed the case.

In the courtroom, the judge said he could not enforce any treatment plans because of the case’s dismissal. The court liaison said she would help Lang with a 90-day “treatment assistant plan” to get him the help he needs. The judge approved, but reiterated he could not enforce the action.

KRDO13 was not able to confirm whether Lang will get to keep his driver’s license. Loew told KRDO13 that the decision is up to the DMV.

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Gifford Fire along Highway 166 grows to over 130,000 acres; Evacuation Orders & Warnings in Effect

Caleb Nguyen

SAN LUIS OBISPO AND SANTA BARBARA COUNTIES, Calif. – The Gifford Fire has grown to 131,605 acres, larger than July’s Madre Fire, making it the largest wildfire this year in California. It is near Gifford Trailhead on Highway 166 near the eastern edges of San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties.

As of Monday, Aug. 17, the fire is 97 percent contained with some Evacuation Orders and Warnings being downgraded or removed for the response that began on the first day of August. Information for each county impacted is detailed below.

Heavy smoke has been seen across the Central Coast and air quality alerts and warnings were issued for parts of Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties.

For the latest on air quality across Santa Barbra County, visit here and for current air quality information for San Luis Obispo County, click here.

La Panza 2 camera at the northern edge of the fire captured at 4:52 p.m. on Aug. 5, 2025.

Nine people have been injured during the fire response shared the Los Padres National Forest.

Santa Barbara County Evacuation Information

Evacuation orders and warnings in Santa Barbara County have been issued for areas south of Highway 166 which forms the northern boundary on the county including:

East of the Willow Springs trailhead and West of Cottonwood Canyon Road

East of School House Road and West of Aliso Canyon Road

East of Cottonwood Canyon Road and West of School House Road

Upper Tepusquet Canyon

Those evacuations are shown in the image below with the fire boundary shown in bright red, Evacuation Orders highlighted in light red, and Evacuation Warnings highlighted in yellow. The dotted black line surrounded by yellow is the county border which roughly matches the path of now-closed Highway 166.

A temporary evacuation point have been established at the Cuyama Valley Family Resource Center at 4689 Highway 166 in New Cuyama that is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Residents can visit the center to incident information, get relief from the smoke, N95 masks, and water.

San Luis Obispo County Evacuation Information

San Luis Obispo County has also issued evacuation orders and warnings that are shown in the image below with Evacuation Orders shaded in red and Evacuation Warnings shaded in yellow.

Source: ARC GIS

For those in need of help finding shelter after being displaced by the evacuations or would like more information about the response, call the American Red Cross at 805-678-3073 or visit the temporary evacuation point at the Santa Margarita Community Hall at 22501 I Street.

Front line of the Gifford Fire response from the air on Aug. 6, 2025. Image courtesy of the Los Padres National Forest

Lopez Lake is under an evacuation order in connection with the Gifford Fire. All visitors must leave the area and public access is closed until further notice. All reservations until Aug. 21, 2025 have been cancelled with refunds granted automatically shared San Luis Obispo County Parks and Recreation.

Direct Relief is managing multiple free mask distribution centers that you can find here.

Smoke from the Gifford Fire rising above the marine layer on Aug. 12, 2025. Shot from the Lopez Hill Camera part of the ALERTCalifornia Camera System.

The Gifford Fire first broke out before 2:00 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025, and resulted from a series of spot fires along Highway 166 according to Los Padres National Forest (LPNF) officials, but an official cause remains under investigation.

Highway 166 to State Route 33, between Santa Maria and New Cuyama, was closed due to the fire, but was reopened under one-lane traffic control on Wednesday, Aug. 13 detailed the California Department of Transportation, District 5.

Over 4,900 fire personnel have been assigned to the fire which has destroyed at least five structures and resulted in the evacuation of over 780 homes detailed the Los Padres National Forest.

More information on this fire response will be added to this article and on Your News Channel broadcasts as it becomes available.

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In Central Oregon, a tribal radio station faces new challenges after federal cuts to public broadcasting

KGW

By Evan Watson, KGW News

WARM SPRINGS, Ore. (KGW) — A tribal radio station serving Central Oregon will cut services and programming after losing 40% of its annual budget in federal funding cuts to public broadcasting.

KWSO 91.9 FM broadcasts from a hill on the Warm Springs Reservation, home to three Confederated Tribes.

“We’re a small station in a small place, a little off the beaten path,” station manager Sue Matters said. “We do our own local newscast — we can cover Warm Springs better than anybody.”

KWSO airs free music and news at all hours, with Matters proud of local reporters who share what’s happening in a Warm Springs community that can feel isolated.

“That’s who’s recording language lessons; that’s who’s doing interviews with elders,” she said. “In rural Oregon and probably rural America, mainstream media doesn’t necessarily show up unless something very bad has happened.”

The station operates on a budget of roughly $600,000 per year, with roughly 40% funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting through a community service grant.

That money is now gone, after Congress voted to approve President Trump’s request to claw back more than a billion dollars appropriated for public broadcasting stations across the country.

RELATED: PNW mainstay radio stations take budget hits from Trump funding cuts

“I don’t think people hate public radio at all, and certainly, we don’t even hardly sound like public radio,” Matters said. “It’s just the national political narrative.”

The federal cuts threaten the jobs of two of KWSO’s six employees, jobs which Matters said she’s determined to save through other funding, but instead, she’ll need to make cuts.

Those cutbacks could include the station’s automated content delivery system, national news programming, tribal news programming, connection to a public radio satellite system, engineering and maintenance contracts, and the station’s website, streaming and app offerings.

“We’re going to have to move forward, and tribal people are kind of used to having to do that,” Matters said.

A station for a community

On a sunny July afternoon in Warm Springs, community members met at the pavilion for a Thursday market.

Local artists sold their latest work, the High Desert Food and Farm Alliance offered bags of free vegetables and produce, and tribal leaders offered community members free gun safes — part of a violence prevention campaign.

“The safety is a big thing, especially for our Native people on our lands,” said Andy Leonard, a suicide prevention coordinator.

In the corner of the open-air market, Matters and her colleagues at KWSO sat a table of their own, offering concert tickets to local listeners.

Nearby, Paige Hurtado, who works for a clean drinking water project in Warm Springs, talked about a recent survey that his organization conducted.

“One of the questions was ‘How do the majority of people get their news sources?’ and the most popular answer was actually our local radio station: KWSO,” Hurtado said.

Hurtado says the Warm Springs community would be vulnerable without local news options like KWSO.

“[We’d] be crippled, disjointed and lack access,” Hurtado said.

Caroline Cruz, the Health and Human Services General Manager for the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, said KWSO has the community’s trust — especially in wildfire season.

“We had the two major fires going on just this past weekend,” Cruz said. “We know if we tune in to KWSO, they’re going to have the most up-to-date information.”

For other community members, the radio station is simply a connection to the past.

“For one thing, you know, it’s home,” said Jeannie Brisbois, who has lived in the Warm Springs area for 24 years. “They interviewed my dad a long time ago, so every once in a while on Veteran’s Day, I get to hear his voice. It means a lot.”

Next steps

Despite the loss of CPB community service grant funding, Matters said she is still determined to keep KWSO on the air

“One hundred percent, we are going to continue to operate — it’s just at what level,” she said.

The expectation is that KWSO will lose access to national news and tribal networks, including Native America Calling and National Native News, programs that hold cultural value for residents.

The station may also lose its automated content delivery system and be pushed into making cuts to repairs and maintenance, the station’s website, streaming, app and community projects. 

Without sacrifices, the high desert could be at risk of becoming a news desert.

“There would be a void where probably incorrect information will grow, you know?” she said. 

Matters said for the tribal-owned station, the challenge feels familiar.

“It’s nothing new for Indian Country. I mean, Indian Country is usually the last to get things from the federal government,” Matters said. “You’ve just got to have the faith that you can battle to get things back.”

That includes seeking more funding from the tribes and applying for more grants.

Matters said KWSO has received an uptick in donations and contributions since the federal government cut public broadcasting, but she’s doubtful that interest will be sustainable.

Meanwhile, she and her staff fight for a radio station that’s known just as much for providing community updates, as providing community tables at the Thursday market.

“That’s not going to stop us,” Cruz said. “As Indian people, we are very resilient. We just survive. We go on.”

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Rio Vista Fire on Fort Hall Reservation fully contained

News Team

UPDATE:

FORT HALL, Idaho (KIFI) —  Firefighters have successfully contained the 44-acre Rio Vista Fire on the Fort Hall Indian Reservation. Crews anticipate having the fire under complete control by 7:00 PM tonight, according to information from Dustin Williams, Unified Command Incident Commander with BIA Wildland Fire.

A preliminary investigation indicates the fire was likely sparked by the hot exhaust system of a vehicle igniting dry grass, according to a Shoshone Bannock Tribes press release. Officials are urging the public to exercise extreme caution during current fire-prone conditions and to avoid parking running vehicles on dry grass or brush, as hot exhaust systems can easily ignite surrounding fuels.

There are currently no structures threatened, and no injuries have been reported. Fire crews will reportedly remain on scene to strengthen containment and monitor for any flare-ups.

“We thank the community for their cooperation and continued vigilance,” stated a release from the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes’ Office of Emergency Management.

ORIGINAL:

FORT HALL, Idaho (KIFI) — Crews are actively combating a wildfire on the Fort Hall Indian Reservation. The Rio Vista Fire is actively burning an estimated 25 acres of sagebrush terrain according to Watch Duty; however, no structures are threatened at this time, according to reservation officials.

The Fort Hall Fire Department is responding to the scene, with active support from the Bureau of Indian Affairs Wildland Fire, North Bannock Fire Department, and Fort Hall Fish & Game.

“Due to the winds and dry conditions, the fire spread quickly,” said Fort Hall Fire Department Chief Eric King.

Fire officials have not identified the cause of the fire at this time. In response to the ongoing fire activity, the following roads are closed to all traffic:

Sheepskin Road (Eastbound)

Bench Road (Eastbound)

Philbin Road (Westbound)

“These closures are in place to ensure safe and unobstructed access for firefighting personnel and equipment,” states a release by the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes’ Office of Emergency Management.

The public is strongly urged to avoid the area. “Unauthorized presence near the fire zone is dangerous and may interfere with emergency operations. We ask for the community’s full cooperation as firefighters work to contain the blaze,” states the release.

This is a developing story. Local News 8 will provide updated information as it becomes available.

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Missing Pocatello woman found dead in Mink Creek Road area

Curtis Jackson

UPDATE Sunday, August 3, 2025: BANNOCK COUNTY, Idaho (KIFI)— Idaho State Police said Linda Zweigart’s body was found Saturday afternoon, August 2, 2025. Troopers said her SUV hit a tree and came to rest down an embankment on South Fork Mink Creek Road.

They said she wasn’t wearing her seatbelt.

Bannock County Sheriff’s office began looking for Zweigart on Friday, August 1, 2025. when they believed she was engangered.

ORIGINAL STORY:

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) – The Bannock County Sheriff’s office is looking for a 67-year old woman who may be in danger.

Linda Zweigart was last seen in the Mink Creek Road area of Pocatello.

She is described as 5 foot 7 inches tall, 182 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. No photo has been submitted.

The sheriff’s office said she may be traveling in a Grey 2017 Hyundai Tucson with Idaho Plate 10EDT.

If you have seen her or know where she may be to contact 911 or the sheriff’s office at 208-236-7111.

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Bannock County’s at-risk youth center receives national recognition and award

Sam Ross

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI)– Bannock County’s ‘The Village: A Place for Youth and Families’ recently received the 2025 Achievement Award from the National Association of Counties for the center’s innovative approach to counseling kids and teens in the area.

Since opening in 2023, The Village has successfully served over 600 young people as a single point of contact for counseling and diversionary programs to keep kids out of the criminal justice system.

Matt Olsen, director of Bannock County Juvenile Justice, said the secret to The Village’s success lies in the center’s high-quality staffing and teamwork between dozens of area organizations.

“We collaborate with so many different agencies in the community,” said Olsen. “We collaborate with local governments, universities, we collaborate with law enforcement, the prosecutor’s office… we have a lot of AmeriCorps students who play a significant role in allowing us to expand, really, the number of people that we can provide prevention services to, and then we just have volunteers from the community who want to come and contribute; so it’s rewarding to see how many people are really interested and committed to helping families and youth in need.”

The work of The Village’s staff and partners has also lead to a marked decrease in court proceedings for youth in the area, according to Bannock County. Between the first quarters of 2024 and 2025, juvenile court filings dropped 43%.

For more information, you can visit The Village’s webpage on the Bannock County website.

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Police close parts of forest in search for suspect in killing of 4 people at a Montana bar, investigators say

CNN Newsource

By Taylor Romine, Josh Campbell, Taylor Galgano, Danya Gainor, CNN

(CNN) — Investigators are still searching for a man they say shot and killed four people at a Montana bar Friday morning, closing parts of the nearby forest over the weekend as they work to locate the “armed and extremely dangerous” suspect, officials said.

As part of the search for suspect Michael Paul Brown, authorities shut down the area surrounding Barker Lakes, west of Anaconda, where the shooting took place, a Montana Department of Justice spokesperson said Saturday night.

Earlier in the day, the spokesperson said multiple local, state and federal agencies were searching for Brown on the ground and in the air around Stumptown Road, which sits north of the lake.

Anaconda-Deer Lodge County Police Chief Bill Sather on Saturday asked for the public’s help and thanked the community for its patience during this stressful time.

“We are doing everything we can to find and bring this perpetrator to justice,” he said in a video posted on Facebook. “It’s OK to go about your business in town but please use caution.”

The Anaconda-Deer Lodge County Law Enforcement Center advised the public in a Facebook post to stay out of the area and not to approach Brown. Sather on Saturday asked anyone who sees anything suspicious to alert 911.

On Friday, a white Ford F-150 that Brown drove was found, but Brown “was not located in or around the vehicle,” Montana Division of Criminal Investigation Administrator Lee Johnson said at a news conference.

Anaconda resident Randy Clark, who lives near Highway 1 and Stumptown Road — where the search for Brown is ongoing — filmed a helicopter flying near his home on Saturday morning on the west side of town.

Clark, a retired police officer, told CNN a helicopter search happened until after about 11 p.m. on Friday and resumed at about 6 a.m. local time.

He said he could hear authorities shouting on Friday, but he couldn’t tell if they were yelling at the suspect or communicating with each other.

“I heard a bunch of sirens and stuff and saw the state troopers and local police flying down Highway 1, west toward Philipsburg,” he said. “(They) stopped directly across from where I live. You could see the blue lights and stuff, everything.”

What happened

The shooting took place at 10:30 a.m. local time at The Owl Bar, and the scene is secure, the Montana DCI said, without providing additional details about what led up to the shooting.

Investigators have identified all four victims of the shooting but aren’t releasing their names until their families have been notified, Johnson said.

Friday’s violence is among at least 256 mass shootings in the US so far this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

Cassandra Dutra, a bartender at the Owl Bar for six months, told CNN she feels extremely overwhelmed and sad about the shooting on Friday.

“It just isn’t real. It’s totally overwhelming,” she said. She believes every person in the bar at the time of the shooting was killed, which included a bartender who was the only staff member working, and three customers.

She said Brown lived next door to the bar and would come in frequently, but noted “he wasn’t a part of the camaraderie” existing with the others.

Dutra was not working on Friday but she lives near the bar and heard noise during the shooting. At first, she assumed it was coming from construction happening outside the bar. When she heard there was a shooting at the Owl, she did not think it was a dangerous situation where people were hurt.

“I didn’t immediately panic because I just know the atmosphere in the Owl … it never occurred to me that anybody was hurt,” she said.

David Gwerder, the owner of The Owl Bar, told The Associated Press he was unaware of any conflicts between Brown and anyone who was in the bar Friday morning.

“He knew everybody that was in that bar. I guarantee you that,” Gwerder told the AP. “He didn’t have any running dispute with any of them. I just think he snapped.”

CNN has reached out to Gwerder for comment.

Five families were ‘destroyed’

Clare Boyle, Brown’s niece, described her uncle as a veteran who struggled with his mental health in the Army and wasn’t the same after his service.

Brown served as an armor crewman in the US Army from January 2001 to May 2005 and was deployed to Iraq from February 2004 to March 2005, Lt. Col. Ruth Castro, a spokesperson with the US Army, told CNN in an email Saturday.

Brown was then in the Montana National Guard from April 2006 to March 2009, she added. He left military service with the rank of sergeant.

Brown’s mental health got progressively worse with the passing of both of his parents, Boyle told CNN.

She emphasized Brown is a “very sick” person — but that she did have happy memories with her uncle, like when he taught her how to ride a bike and fish.

Boyle said she personally feels remorse and heartbreak for all of the families, noting that five families were “destroyed” on Friday.

When asked about Brown’s mental health history, Castro said the Army was unable to release medical information “due to policy and Privacy Act constraints.”

Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte said on X he is “praying for the victims, their loved ones, and the brave law enforcement officers” who responded to the scene.

Montana Congressman Ryan Zinke encouraged people in the area to “stay inside and lock their doors.”

The FBI, the Denver office of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the Granite County Sheriff’s Office said they are assisting with the investigation.

This story has been updated with additional information.

CNN’s Sarah Dewberry, David Williams, Michelle Watson and Jessica Flynn contributed to this report.

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