Bonneville County Prosecutor faces funding gap compared to public defenders

Max Gershon

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Bonneville County Prosecuting Attorney Randy Neal reports that his office is struggling with limited funding compared to state-supported public defenders, creating challenges in the local justice system. Until 2024, Bonneville County funded both prosecutors and public defenders from local taxes, ensuring equal resources.

In 2024, a state law shifted public defense funding to the state, while prosecutors continued to rely on county budgets. Neal describes the shift: “For every dollar the county puts into prosecution, the state is paying $1.50 for defending criminals. With conflict cases handled by private attorneys at $125 an hour, it’s closer to $1.75 from the state, creating up to a 3 to 1 advantage for public defenders in district courts.”

This funding gap results in prosecutors being outnumbered, often facing three defense attorneys for every one prosecutor in felony courts. Public defenders handle smaller caseloads, while prosecutors manage up to 18-20 jury trials per week on a single judge’s docket.

Neal says residents can attend county budget hearings or contact Bonneville County Commissioners to support balanced funding for the justice system.

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Trump praises Missouri Republicans for considering redistricting

Alison Patton

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

President Donald Trump on Thursday morning on Truth Social praised Missouri Republicans for talking about redistricting.

No official plans have made yet, but a spokesperson from Gov. Mike Kehoe’s office said the governor and lawmakers are considering options for a special session. Kehoe had publicly backed the idea earlier this month.

“As these discussions continue, I am confident the Senate will be prepared to act when the time comes,” Missouri Senate President Pro Tem Cindy O’Laughlin (R-Shelbina) said.

Missouri has six Republicans and two Democratic representatives in the U.S. House.

Missouri Republicans, with the backing of the Trump Administration, want to redistrict the current congressional map, and split the Democratic pocket of Kansas City. Doing that would take a seat from the Democrats, leaving Missouri with a potential for up to seven Republicans representing the state in the house.

This one seat out of the 435 seats in the House might seem insignificant, but it could improve the Republican’s odds, said Charles Zug, who is a political science professor at the University of Missouri.

Republicans hold a slim majority in the House. Based on history, the incumbent party typically loses some seats during the next election, Zug said. The other element that gets added to this mix is other states redistricting.

Majority-Republican Texas and majority-Democratic California have advanced ideas of redrawing their districts. Zug indicated both states could see as many as five additional seats added to their majority party’s total.

If both states are successful, then the opposing parties are back at equilibrium, Zug said. Zug said he thinks Missouri will wait to see what happens between those two states before doing anything.

State Rep. Adrian Plank (D-Columbia) said he thinks Kehoe will wait until at least after the veto session on Sept. 10. Plank, and most Democrats, are opposed to redistricting.

“What happens with redistricting, especially in a way they’re trying to do it now, is they’re trying to pick their voters instead of the voters pick their representation,” Plank said.

A number of protesters voiced their opinions against redistricting at an event this past Saturday outside the Missouri Capitol. An ABC 17 News poll from Aug. 5 found 81% of respondents were against the idea.

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FBI conducts search at Trump critic John Bolton’s home and office as part of resumed national security investigation

CNN

CNN

By Evan Perez, Kristen Holmes, Michael Callahan, Shania Shelton, Adam Cancryn, CNN

(CNN) — The FBI conducted a court-authorized search Friday at former national security adviser John Bolton’s home and office as part of a renewed investigation into whether he disclosed classified information in his 2020 book, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The investigative step immediately drew criticism that President Donald Trump was using the muscle of the US government to target a political foe, though the specific basis for the searches was not clear.

Bolton served as President Donald Trump’s national security adviser in his first term, but the president fired him in 2019 and the two have been sharply at odds ever since. Trump had previously threatened to jail Bolton over the 2020 book, which was critical of Trump’s foreign policy knowledge, and the Justice Department investigated him in Trump’s first-term. That probe was closed under President Joe Biden.

Since Trump’s return to office, Bolton has emerged as one of the most vocal critics of his foreign policy and ongoing efforts to end the war in Ukraine, often deriding the president for his perceived deference to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

CNN observed FBI personnel at Bolton’s house in the Washington, DC, area on Friday morning. They were seen speaking to a person on the porch of the house, and at least four to six agents were seen going inside. Some of the agents took bags out of the vehicles to bring inside, but nothing was seen coming out of the residence.

The FBI also was searching Bolton’s office on Friday morning, according to a source. CNN saw several unmarked federal vehicles outside the building in downtown Washington.

While the searches stemmed from the Justice Department reopening the years-old investigation involving the book, investigators are also exploring other possible leaks as a form of “weaponization,” a source said.

Asked about the search on Friday, Trump told reporters he knew “nothing about it.” He added that he expected the Justice Department to brief him likely later in the day and suggested he had the power to initiate law enforcement moves.

“I don’t want to know about it. It’s not necessary. I could know about it. I could be the one starting it, and I’m actually the chief law enforcement officer. But I feel that it’s better this way,” he said, before calling Bolton a “low life.”

“When I hired him, he served a good purpose, because, as you know, he was one of the people that forced Bush to do the ridiculous bombings in the Middle East. Bolton, he wants to always kill people, and he’s very bad at what he does, but he worked out great for me,” Trump said.

Vice President JD Vance later said in an interview for Meet the Press with Kristen Welker that “classified documents are certainly part” of the motivation behind the investigation, “but I think that there’s a broad concern about, about Ambassador Bolton.”

Vance denied that the search was politically motivated, characterizing it as part of an evidence-gathering operation “driven by the law and not by politics.”

“If they ultimately bring a case, it will be because they determine that he has broken the law,” he said. “We’re going to be deliberate about that, because we don’t think that we should throw people — even if they disagree with us politically, maybe especially if they disagree with us politically — you shouldn’t throw people willy-nilly in prison.”

Reached by CNN earlier on Friday, Bolton said he was unaware of the FBI activity and was looking into it further. His attorney didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

The search at Bolton’s house was first reported by the New York Post. The FBI declined to comment on it.

Trump’s fraught history with Bolton

Trump has repeatedly gone after his former national security adviser while in office, including most recently saying this month that the media was “constantly quoting fired losers and really dumb people like John Bolton.”

The president also terminated Bolton’s Secret Service detail within hours of starting his second term in January.

During his first term, the president threatened to jail Bolton after his 2020 book, “The Room Where It Happened,” claimed Trump was woefully under-informed on matters of foreign policy and obsessed with shaping his media legacy. The book also reported that Trump asked the leaders of Ukraine and China to help him win the 2020 election.

The book included material that initially was cleared for publication by career officials at the White House, but Trump political appointees sought to overturn that approval.

The Justice Department investigated Bolton over the possibility that he “unlawfully disclosed classified information” in his memoir, though officials under former President Joe Biden closed the investigation and dropped a related lawsuit in 2021 connected to the publication of the book.

Bolton, in turn, has emerged as one of Trump’s harshest critics, frequently questioning his fitness for office and decision-making while deriding his approach to foreign policy. A longtime foreign policy hawk, he has taken particular aim at Trump’s efforts to broker peace between Russia and Ukraine, saying earlier this week that Putin was “working Trump over.”

In the wake of Trump’s face-to-face meeting with the Russian president last week, Bolton said on CNN that “Putin clearly won.”

“Meetings will continue because Trump wants a Nobel Peace Prize, but I don’t see these talks making any progress,” he wrote in a Friday post on X, just hours before the FBI arrived at his home.

Bolton last year had also led a campaign against FBI Director Kash Patel’s candidacy to run the agency, at one point penning a scathing op-ed in the Wall Street Journal that was headlined “Kash Patel Doesn’t Belong at the FBI.”

“The Senate should reject this nomination 100-0,” he told CNN in December.

Patel in his 2023 book “Government Gangsters” had listed Bolton among more than 50 current and former US officials that he claimed were a “dangerous threat to democracy.”

Trump and his government have carried out a campaign of retribution in recent months against a wide swath of the president’s perceived political enemies, ranging from former Trump officials to members of Congress to the prosecutors who brought cases against the president while he was out of office.

The White House stripped Bolton and a handful of other former officials of their security detail and clearances shortly after Trump took office in January. The president later ordered Justice Department investigations of two first-term appointees-turned critics, former Homeland Security official Miles Taylor and former former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency chief Christopher Krebs.

Taylor penned a high-profile anonymous op-ed in 2018 criticizing Trump and depicting chaos within his White House, and he has since emerged as a vocal critic. Krebs was fired in late 2020 after refusing to back up Trump’s unfounded claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

The FBI, meanwhile, launched investigations earlier this summer into former CIA Director John Brennan and former FBI Director James Comey. Trump at the time said he wasn’t aware of the probes, but called them “very dishonest people.”

Last week, Patel declassified and released internal FBI interview notes from a former House Intelligence Committee staffer who first accused former Rep. Adam Schiff in 2017 of directing illegal leaks of classified information about Trump and Russia, in an escalation of Trump’s long-standing feud with Schiff.

The Justice Department also opened a grand jury investigation into New York Attorney General Letitia James this month over the civil actions she brought against Trump and the National Rifle Association.

Public nature of FBI search

The public nature of the FBI search on Friday at Bolton’s house – with agents wearing prominently identifiable “FBI” jackets while entering and exiting the house throughout the morning and key officials appearing to telegraph it on social media – has already led neighbors and friends of Bolton to say the search may be related to political retribution.

Top FBI officials posted on social media Friday morning just after 7 am. FBI Director Kash Patel wrote on X, “NO ONE is above the law … @FBI agents on mission.” The FBI’s co-deputy director Dan Bongino posted, “Public corruption will not be tolerated.”

Vance and Attorney General Pam Bondi also reposted Patel’s comment, with Bondi adding, “America’s safety isn’t negotiable. Justice will be pursued. Always.”

If the officials are cryptically referring to Bolton, it would be a notable departure of the Bureau’s practice of not commenting publicly on investigations, especially as FBI agents are still at the scene.

For instance, the hours-long FBI search of Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago for classified records in 2022 was conducted with officials in plain clothes, and with the public largely unaware of the search until it was nearly concluded. Patel has since called the Mar-a-Lago search a “total weaponization and politicization by the FBI and DOJ.”

Trump was indicted by a grand jury for mishandling several national security documents he retained after his first term in office, keeping boxes of classified records in a bathroom, a ballroom and other rooms at his Florida resort, until a Florida-based judge dismissed the case in 2024.

Bolton, a longtime conservative who had previously served in the Reagan and both Bush administrations, has been a political foe of Trump’s since he left the White House in the first term.

This story and headline have been updated with additional information.

CNN’s Katelyn Polantz and Kylie Atwood contributed to this report.

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

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Student group alleges MU is erasing Black voices after event was canceled over name

Euphenie Andre

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Legion of Black Collegians claims the University of Missouri is trying to erase its presence, while administrators cite inclusivity concerns over a canceled event.

The Legion of Black Collegians stated in an Instagram post on Wednesday that its “Black 2 Class Block Party” was canceled after administrators took issue with the name.

University of Missouri President Mun Choi responded with a statement Wednesday, claiming the name was not inclusive.

“The University of Missouri fosters a non-discriminatory campus environment. When holding events using University facilities, student organizations must avoid excluding individuals based on race. The name of the ‘Black 2 Class Block Party’ proposed by LBC suggested such exclusivity. For that reason, the decision was made that the event as described would not be held on campus.”

The situation has sparked widespread debate on social media, with many students and alumni weighing in on the ongoing conflict.

Students say they are not surprised by the decision, pointing to similar conflict last year when the group’s “Welcome Black BBQ” was challenged by the university. In response, LBC created the new block party as an alternative. The “Welcome Black and Gold BBQ” will still be held on Aug. 29 at the Black Culture Center, but the LBC has withdrawn from participating, the group wrote.

MU junior Dorion Bailey, who was a part of the LBC executive board last year, said the organization had to carefully navigate wording in its events.

“We ran into the same kind of discrepancies last year with name changes and know that our organization is being looked at in terms of what kind of events we’re trying to put on and the language that we’re using within our programming,” Bailey said.

Despite the challenges, Bailey said last year’s event was a success.

“We had a very positive turnout, and I even noticed fleets of administrative leaders coming to the event and relishing in the festivities,” he recalled.

LBC accused the university of canceling the event without offering alternatives.

“These actions are a deliberate act of erasure. At every turn, we are shut down. Things as simple as putting “Black” in a name, results in consequences,” the statement read.

Incoming freshmen Delali Thompson and Lauryn Jackson said the decision left them discouraged.

“Being a Black student in a PWI [predominantly white institution], it’s natural for us to want to find each other, find connections, resources, and I don’t thin it’s fair fort he school to cancel an event just because we want to find out community,” Jackson said.

Thompson shared similar sentiments.

“I was really disappointed about that, especially being like a new black freshman, It just ruined my first impression of the school because I was ready toto meet some other people because this is a PWI.”

Students argue the university’s stance is inconsistent. Based on Mizzou Events Calender there is several events hosted for specific marginalized groups.

“I find that interesting in the way that the University chooses what kind of language to deem as acceptable and non-acceptable, because there’s nothing wrong with any culture, any kind of organization wanting to put on anything or the student body,” Bailey said. “So my thing is, when we do put an emphasis on black, do you want us to say African American?”

Following the cancellation, LBC is demanding that the university:

Release a campus-wide message addressing the decision

Hold a town hall within 60 days

Publicly condemn racial harassment

Choi also said in his statement that the school will not respond to demands, but university leaders will meet with the LBC “to continue this discussion.”

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Create a healthy back to school routine

Kailey Galaviz

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) – Summer can be a lawless time for kids; staying up late, sleeping in and raiding the pantry can really throw off a good routine.

Lauren Stoia, leadership coach and author of ‘Your Power Within,’ has some suggestions to help parents get their children started on the right foot.

Click play to watch.

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Jefferson City unveils proposed $86.9M budget, focuses on salaries, safety, infrastructure

Mitchell Kaminski

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

 Jefferson City officials introduced an $86.9 million spending plan Thursday that Mayor Ron Fitzwater described as a “bare bones budget to meet the needs of this city.”

The proposed fiscal year 2026 budget, presented to the City Council’s first Budget Committee meeting, comes in close to last year’s approved total of $86.5 million. The city’s general fund, which covers basic operations, makes up $42.8 million of the plan, with public safety again being the largest expense.

Police spending accounts for $13.9 million, roughly 31% of the general fund, while fire services are budgeted at $10.7 million, or 25%. Public works is the next-largest department at $7.8 million. Personnel services overall make up nearly half the city’s general fund budget, totaling $43.4 million.

Fitzwater said budget priorities include “taking care of their people” through salaries and benefits, supporting public safety, and investing in infrastructure, particularly road improvements. 

His budget includes a 2.5% pay increase for city employees, as well as a 10% increase for health insurance and 5% for dental insurance. The mayor noted that departments submitted $49 million in requests, but only $42 million could be funded, leaving the original proposal $7 million over budget before adjustments.

The budget also proposes $14.3 million for wastewater services and $11.5 million for parks and recreation.

Revenue challenges and adjustments

In a letter to the council, Fitzwater said the city anticipates a slight dip in sales tax revenue, projecting $14.3 million, about 1% lower than last year’s receipts and the fiscal year 2025 budget.

A new revenue source has been added to the general fund: Gross receipts utility tax payments from the city’s wastewater system. The so-called PILOTS-GRUT revenue stream will transfer 6% of gross receipts from wastewater to the general fund, allocated for street improvements. City officials emphasized it will not affect consumer rates.

Key modifications

The budget sets aside money for several upcoming elections, including a November 2025 lodging tax vote, the April 2026 general election and an August 2026 capital improvement measure. Lodging tax revenue is expected to offset the cost of the special election.

Other notable changes include:

Funding for six new leased police vehicles.

Increased legal and human resources spending for union negotiations and an updated compensation study.

A buy-down of $1.05 million from the Capital Improvement Sales Tax to address HVAC issues at City Hall and the police facility.

Support for the Chamber Childcare Initiative Program and additional yard waste pickups.

The final budget, incorporating any amendments adopted during Budget Committee meetings, will be presented at a regular City Council meeting held at the end of the annual budget season.

Throughout the process, the City Council has the authority to propose and adopt further amendments until it is passed.  

The new fiscal year begins Nov. 1 for Jefferson City.

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Idaho Supreme Court overturns lower court ruling in Pocatello land dispute

News Team

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) — The Idaho Supreme Court has ruled in favor of a Pocatello family trust in a long-running land dispute. 2 trusts from the Rupp family sued the city of Pocatello, Mayor Brian Blad, and several developers over the Northgate Parkway project.

A lower court had dismissed the case, granting judgment to the city and developers.

But the high court reversed that decision, saying the district court failed to properly analyze the motions and didn’t allow the trusts to argue in opposition. The case now heads back to the district court.

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Heads Up, Rexburg! City phone lines may be down for upgrades next week

News Team

REXBURG, Idaho (KIFI) — Starting Monday, August 28, at 7:30 AM, the City of Rexburg will begin a major upgrade to its phone system. This important project will continue throughout the week and may cause temporary disruptions to city phone lines.

The main City Hall line will be the first to be upgraded and may be down for up to an hour. The city’s IT team will then continue to work on other phone lines across various city facilities.

“If you need to reach us during this time, please be patient; we’ll be back online quickly,” states the city in a Facebook post.

During the upgrade, residents are advised to use alternative contact methods. You can still reach the City of Rexburg by email or through the contact form on the official city website.

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Columbia Public Schools working to balance AI’s potential while keeping cheating down

Olivia Hayes

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Columbia Public Schools is adapting to the evolution of artificial intelligence and its use throughout the district.

CPS spokesperson Michelle Baumstark said the district has a group working to learn more about various aspects of AI. This effort is being led by Beth Winton under the direction of Adam Taylor, the district’s chief academic officer.

“AI is used in lots of ways for instructional purposes, realizing efficiencies and innovation. There are also different types of AI,” Baumstark wrote in a statement to ABC 17 News.

Baumstark said the district is not taking a stance that AI can never be used, but AI should not replace a student learning a needed skill. She said that AI can be used by students to “personalize learning and problem solving, but should not replace the student’s own original thinking.”

When people think of AI use in education, it tends to fall under the use of generative AI, the product of programs such as ChatGPT.

Baumstark said acceptable uses of AI for students include:     

Assisting students in better understanding of the curriculum or skill development. 

Aiding in classroom research tasks.

Individualizing tutoring, reviewing content and as a study aid.  

Baumstark said students are expected to provide transparency about external sources in their work, including generative AI. Teachers also may have syllabus instructions that include acceptable AI use specific to their classroom. Students must cite and explain the role the tool played in the creation of their work. 

The Columbia Board of Education approved the 2025 school year’s artificial intelligence use plan at its Jan. 27 meeting. The plan says students and employees may be disciplined, and employees may be terminated, for AI use that violates the policy or any related procedures.

Baumstark said students must comply with all district technology use, all statements in the CPS Student Handbook and school board policies on academic integrity.  

The district’s student handbook states that any form of academic dishonesty, including plagiarism, will not be tolerated.

“It shall be a violation of policy for students to take credit for work that is not their own. This would include, but not be limited to, the use of technologically generated writing, purchased papers, books, periodicals, interviews, and research abstracts without attribution,” the policy reads.

Students who cheat or plagiarize may face punishments including: no credit for the work, grade reduction, course failure or removal from extracurricular activities.

At least once per school year, the district’s policies on AI use for safety, data privacy, appropriateness and effectiveness will be reviewed and changed if needed. Employees and students may also submit requests or suggestions for new AI uses to the district.

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Justice Department releases Ghislaine Maxwell interview transcripts

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The U.S. Justice Department has released transcripts of a deputy attorney general’s two-day interview with Jeffrey Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

The department posted transcripts from each day of the interview, along with 16 audio files, on the Justice website on Friday afternoon. Maxwell was transferred to a minimum security prison after her interview with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche.

ABC News reported on Friday that Maxwell provided no incriminating information about well-known people during the interview. She also told Blanche that she didn’t witness or hear of any inappropriate or criminal activity by President Donald Trump or former president Bill Clinton, ABC reported.

Check back for updates to this developing story.

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