Santa Maria man person of interest in shooting investigation

Caleb Nguyen

SANTA MARIA, Calif. – A 36-year-old Santa Maria man is a person of interest after shooting someone leading to their hospitalization on Friday.

The shooting investigation at the 500 block of East El. Camino required police activity just after 1:30 p.m. Friday in Santa Maria, according to the Santa Maria Police Department.

SMPD officers advised citizens to avoid travelling in this area due to street closures, and cleared the scene as of 9:00 p.m. Friday.

Neighbors in the area say police had been there since 9:00 a.m. Friday. SMPD officers say the suspect remains at large and the man wasn’t found inside once they and other law enforcement went in the home.

The 36-year-old is wanted on outstanding warrants and is potentially armed, according to the SMPD.

Those who are aware of or have information about his whereabouts are asked to contact the SMPD immediately.

This case remains under active investigation by the SMPD Detective Bureau.

Click here to follow the original article.

BLSS: Week 2 high school football highlights, scores and more

Jesus Reyes

COACHELLA VALLEY, Calif. (KESQ) – We had some big games for week 2 of the high school football season. We’ve got the highlights on this week’s Best Local Sports Show.

La Quinta32
@
Yucca Valley14
F

Rancho Mirage30
@
Coachella Valley7
F

Xavier Prep31
@
Desert Hot Springs0
F

San Bernardino0
@
Cathedral City6
F

Palm Springs28
@
Grand Terrace21
F

Shadow Hills19
@
Palo Verde Valley6
F

Indio0
@
Fullerton50
F

San Jacinto Valley Academy22
@
Desert Mirage0
F

Palm Desert14
@
Central33
F

DCA25
@
Riverside Prep6
F

/**/

Click here to follow the original article.

Palm Springs to Host Annual Anti-Bullying Event in October

City News Service

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – A nonprofit will host its third annual anti-bullying event in Palm Springs this fall, offering education, support and family-friendly activities for the community.

Boo2Bullying will host “Kick Bullying to the Curb” from 4-7 p.m. Oct. 11 at Power Stadium in Sunrise Park, 1901 E. Baristo Road.   

The free event will include informational booths from partner organizations and all-ages activities such as face-painting, a petting zoo presented by Mobile Zoo of Southern California and free hot dogs, organizers said.

The event will be held from 4 to 5:30 p.m.   

A community kickball game will follow at 6 p.m., featuring local leaders Shaka Gray and Connie Golds. Palm Springs native and “The Voice” contestant Steve Knill will perform the national anthem.

“Every child and every family deserves a safe and welcoming environment,” Boo2Bullying founder Dimitri Halkidis said in a statement. “This event is more than a game — it’s a movement to create communities where kindness and inclusion win every time.”

The event will coincide with National Coming Out Day, officials said.   

“Mental health is enhanced when children and teens feel empowered, build their self-esteem and realize they are not alone,” Halkidis said.   

Palm Springs Mayor Ron deHarte, who plans to attend, said, “Palm Springs is proud to support Boo2Bullying and this joyful festival.”

Halkidis founded the organization in 2011 after the suicide of a friend, building programs dedicated to fostering inclusive,  bullying-free communities, according to the nonprofit.

Click here to follow the original article.

Appeals court says Trump unlawfully leaned on emergency powers to impose tariffs

CNN Newsource

Originally Published: 29 AUG 25 17:57 ET

Updated: 29 AUG 25 18:21 ET

By Devan Cole, Katelyn Polantz, Ramishah Maruf, Elisabeth Buchwald, CNN

(CNN) —A federal appeals court ruled Friday that President Donald Trump unlawfully leaned on emergency powers to impose sweeping tariffs earlier this year.

“Because we agree that (the International Emergency Economic Powers Act’s) grant of presidential authority to ‘regulate’ imports does not authorize the tariffs imposed by the Executive Orders, we affirm,” the Federal Circuit said in an unsigned opinion upholding a lower-court ruling against Trump’s tariffs.

The tariffs remain in place for now, after the court delayed implementation of its order until October. That gives the Trump administration time to file an appeal with the Supreme Court.

“All tariffs are still in effect!” Trump posted late Friday on social media. “If these tariffs ever went away, it would a total disaster for our country.”

Trump has used his sweeping tariffs to reshape not just global trade, but alliances with friendly nations and relationships with adversaries. The levies are a cornerstone of his economic plan. If some of the powers he’s claimed to set those tariffs are ultimately permanently blocked, the administration would need to find other levers to accomplish some of Trump’s ambitious goals.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in June that tariff negotiations with America’s trading partners would likely be “wrapped up” by Labor Day. However, that deadline seems improbable, given that foreign leaders currently reviewing their trade terms with the United States may now require additional clarity on the legal application of Trump’s tariffs.

In a statement on Friday, the White House defended the president’s powers to impose import taxes using the economic emergency law.

“President Trump lawfully exercised the tariff powers granted to him by Congress to defend our national and economic security from foreign threats,” White House spokesman Kush Desai said in the statement. “The President’s tariffs remain in effect, and we look forward to ultimate victory on this matter.”

The court ruled that Congress, in passing the IEEPA, did not give the president “wide-ranging authority to impose tariffs of the nature of the Trafficking and Reciprocal Tariffs.”

“Notably, when drafting IEEPA, Congress did not use the term ‘tariff’ or any of its synonyms, like ‘duty’ or ‘tax,’” the court said in its majority ruling. “The absence of any such tariff language in IEEPA contrasts with statutes where Congress has affirmatively granted such power and included clear limits on that power.”

The case was heard by the full bench of the Federal Circuit. Seven of its judges ruled against Trump, while four dissented from the court’s decision.

Though the majority ruled that Trump exceeded his authority when he used the emergency law to impose the tariffs, it declined to block them outright. Instead, it sent a pair of challenges to the levies back to the lower court to take another look at whether it went too far when it blocked the tariffs on a nationwide basis.

A federal court ruled in May that Trump did not have the authority under the IEEPA to impose sweeping tariffs. The Trump administration immediately appealed the decision, setting the course for a legal battle over the economic policy that Trump promises will re-focus the American economy on manufacturing, but could raise prices for small businesses and consumers.

A three-judge panel at the US Court of International Trade blocked all tariffs invoked under IEEPA, the “Liberation Day” tariffs Trump announced on April 2, and the tariffs placed earlier this year against China, Mexico and Canada that were designed to combat fentanyl coming into the United States. Notably, the order did not include the 25% tariffs on autos, auto parts, steel or aluminum, which were under a different law, Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act.

The panel unanimously came to a summary judgment on two separate cases in one opinion. One was a lawsuit filed in April by the Liberty Justice Center, a libertarian legal advocacy group representing wine-seller VOS Selections and four other small businesses. The other was filed by 12 Democratic states against the government over tariffs.

The appeals court consolidated those two cases.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

CNN’s Samantha Waldenberg and Bryan Mena contributed reporting.

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

Click here to follow the original article.

Temperatures to warm up at the end of the weekend

Danyelle Burke North

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY-TV) – We’re seeing slightly below normal temperatures today that will warm up to around 5 degrees above normal this weekend. According to the National Weather Service (NWS), we’ll have dry conditions through the weekend before rain chances gradually increase during the first half of next week.

We’ll have a sunny day today and end Saturday night with a waxing half 1st quarter moon on Saturday. We’ll then see partly cloudy days to begin next week.

NWS reports slight chances (15-30%) for isolated showers and thunderstorms across the higher terrain on Sunday afternoon and early evening.

Click here to follow the original article.

Coachella family left with financial and medical burden after drunk driver crashes into taco truck business

Athena Jreij

COACHELLA, Calif. (KESQ) — The owners of Fernando’s Tacos in Coachella are reeling after a suspected drunk driver crashed into their taco truck earlier this week.

Last Thursday, August 21, a White Toyota Corolla ran a stop sign and crashed into a power pole at the intersection of Avenue 52 and Calhoun Street. That driver, who later died from their injuries, then hit a Nissan Frontier, which was pushed into the taco truck.

The owners, Lourdes and Fernando Solorzano were in that truck and are now both recovering from their injuries while also grappling with the financial burden of losing their business. 

“It’s sad because I had big dreams of working but then everything ended,” Fernando said.

“That’s actually the first time that I heard my dad get emotional over the accident. He’s really strong, you know, My dad loves meeting new people. He loves doing this line of work, you know, customer service,” Samantha Solorzano, their daughter said.

Fernando says the crash pushed his truck 15 feet down the road. Both him and his wife blacked out from the impact and have trouble remembering much, but they say there’s still residual pain from the accident.

“I was working outside the trailer then boom it all crashed. The police report said it pushed my truck about 15 feet,” Fernando said.

“My mom kind of blacked out from how quick it was and from when she first initially fell. Then she says that out of that state of unconsciousness she kind of heard my dad screaming for her to see if she was okay,” Samantha said.

That accident totaled the truck they use to haul the trailer and now they’re left without everyday transportation, like to Lourdes’s doctor appointments.

They estimate the damage is in the thousands, but their daughter Samantha says the damage goes beyond the financial burden.

“With with this accident, it’s something traumatic for them, so I don’t know if they would even want to get back into it or even if they wanted to later down the road,” she said.

If you’d like to support the family’s Gofundme, visit: https://www.gofundme.com/f/rebuild-fernandos-tacos-help-lourdes-and-fernando?cdn-cache=0

Click here to follow the original article.

Fish and Game’s 2025 hunting outlook predicts strong elk, growing mule deer populations in Southeast Region

Sam Ross

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI)– The Idaho Department of Fish and Game released its 2025 Deer/Elk Hunting Outlook report earlier this week, and deer and elk populations should be strong across the state for fall big game hunters thanks to mild winters over the past couple of years.

In Fish and Game’s Southeast Region, elk populations are expected to be similar to, or even slightly higher than, last fall. Mule deer are also on the upswing, but still recovering from the harsh winter of 2022-23.

“We saw a drastic reduction in our mule deer population here in the southeast region, and we’re still seeing the effects of that winter,” said Jennifer Jackson, communications manager for Fish and Game’s Southeast Region. “It’s not going to look the same as it did prior to that winter a couple of years ago, but the good news is that we are seeing our populations of mule deer trending in the right direction; so there were more mule deer on the landscape last fall, and that’s also what hunters should see again this year.”

Fish and Game also recently set big game seasons for 2025 and 2026, which bring some new rules and regulations to hunting opportunities in the area, including a major weapon-type change for hunters accessing mule deer near American Falls.

From the Fish and Game website: “Most notably, the mule deer any-weapon general season in Unit 73A was changed to a muzzleloader-only season. Centerfire rifles are no longer a legal method of take in Unit 73A general deer seasons.”

The Idaho Department of Fish and Game reminds hunters that it is their responsibility to check local hunting regulations and changes when planning a hunt.

For more information on the deer/elk outlook for this fall, or for updates to Southeast Region hunting season regulations, visit Fish and Game’s website.

Click here to follow the original article.

Pop up wedding dress shop providing cost-effective options for brides stops in Pocatello

Sam Ross

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI)– Dress Express, a family owned wedding dress supplier based in Montana, brought over 1,400 dresses to the Portneuf Valley to give brides an affordable chance to look their best on the big day.

Stacy Sommer, owner of Dress Express, said she started the business three years ago after buying ‘sample dresses’ from large bridal salons to keep the clothing out of the landfill and help out brides-to-be by offering the outfits at a steep discount.

“We start at 50 bucks, so almost anybody can afford a wedding dress,” said Sommer. “Even if it’s just quick to the elopement and the justice of the peace, everybody should be able to wear a dress if they want to.”

Dress Express’ pop up sale is Friday, August 29, until 4 p.m. and Saturday, August 30, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m at the Red Lion Hotel in Pocatello. For more information, you can visit Dress Express’ website.

Click here to follow the original article.

8 injured in bus accident on I-29 Friday evening

News-Press NOW

BUCHANAN COUNTY, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A bus containing 29 kids from a religious school in Westwood, Kansas, flipped over at the 35.2-mile marker on Interstate 29, injuring eight kids on board.

The St. Joseph Police Department sent out a Nixle Alert at 3:45 p.m. on Friday afternoon, telling drivers to avoid the area of northbound I-29 near southeast Grand DD due to a traffic accident.

The school name on the bus that flipped over reads “Olivet Baptist Church, Shawnee Mission Christian School”, which contained soccer and volleyball players from the school.

The teams were headed to St. Joseph for games.

“The front passenger gear tire and a rear passenger tire blew out,” said Sgt. Shane Hux with MSHP. “The bus traveled off the east side of the northbound lanes and overturned.”

Numerous emergency response teams, like the Northland Regional Ambulance, Buchanan County Sheriff’s Office, Missouri State Highway Patrol and local fire departments, were on the scene from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m.

The crash resulted in two serious and six minor injuries. Five of the juveniles injured were sent to North Kansas City Hospital, and three of the juveniles were sent to Mosaic Life Care.

The rest of the kids on the bus were transported to a local fire station and were picked up by their parents.

Click here to follow the original article.

Columbia teen charged with murder to be moved to adult facility

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Boone County judge has granted a motion to move a teenager charged with murder from the Juvenile Center to the Boone County Jail.

In a hearing on Friday, the juvenile officer argued for Kavon Williams, 16, to be moved to the facility after several incidents.

In December, the judge denied the same request but said that if Williams’ behavior could change, his decision if brought back up by the state.

The juvenile office cited eight incidents between May 7 and July 14, including having contraband, having inappropriate conversations and arguments with other juveniles and a fight in one of the classrooms resulting in a teacher getting hurt.

“Mr. Williams is currently being housed with younger juveniles, and his continued threatening, disruptive and aggressive behaviors have placed the safety of staff and juvenile residents in the facility at risk,” counsel for the juvenile office said in the motion.

Williams was charged with second-degree murder and first-degree robbery in September after he allegedly killed a man from Macon County in February 2024.

Click here to follow the original article.