YPD looking for vehicle involved in hit and run

Manoah Tuiasosopo

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – The Yuma Police Department (YPD) is searching for a vehicle involved in a hit and run.

According to a post on Facebook, it happened in the area of S. 21st Avenue on August 6 at around 2:30 a.m.

YPD says the vehicle, a 2016 Chevrolet Malibu, dark in color, was driving southbound on 21st Avenue when it crashed into a residential fence.

After it sustained heavy front-end damage, the Malibu was then seen driving away going westbound on Eighth Street.

Courtesy: Yuma Police Department

If anyone has any information regarding the vehicle or the driver, call YPD at (928) 783-4421, or 78-CRIME at (928) 782-7463 to remain anonymous.

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Kehoe appoints Hanaway as next attorney general

News-Press NOW

By Marie Moyer

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ) — With Attorney General Andrew Bailey set to head to Washington, D.C., this September to work for the FBI after being tapped by Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel, Gov. Mike Kehoe has appointed a new attorney general.

Kehoe said Tuesday that Catherine Hanaway will take over Sept. 8. She will be the first female attorney general.

Hanaway was a Republican House Speaker from 2003-2005, the first and only woman to hold the post.

Bailey, a Republican, previously challenged COVID-19 masking in schools as well as gender-affirming care such as puberty blockers. Bailey also created the anti-human trafficking task force and was a strong supporter of pro-law enforcement legislation.

Bailey also has a record as a state official loyal to President Donald Trump, supporting administration policies with dozens of legal filings since he took office in January 2023. Former Gov. Mike Parson appointed Bailey in 2022, and he was elected to AG in 2024.

Democratic House Minority Leader Rep. Ashley Aune said in a statement Monday that the House Minority Caucus hopes Kehoe will appoint a “competent attorney general.”

“Bailey’s departure gives the governor an opportunity to appoint a competent andprofessional attorney general who will defend the rights of all Missourians instead of wastingtaxpayer money on frivolous culture war lawsuits that regularly get laughed out of court,” Aune said.

Hanaway works for the law firm Husch Blackwell, representing white collar clients in areas such as lobbying law, fraud and money laundering. One of her clients is the Grain Belt Express, a renewable energy project that Bailey staunchly opposed.

Kehoe, in making the announcement, said Hanaway was a champion for conservative Missouri values.

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ABC-7 at 4: Fall cohort for Realize board training

Nichole Gomez

El Paso, TX (KVIA-TV) – The Paso del Norte Health Foundation and United Way of El Paso County are collaborating to empower local nonprofit organizations.  Laura Falco, Director of Marketing and Engagement, explains what board training is and how one can get involved.

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Lori Vallow Daybell back in Idaho prison

Curtis Jackson

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI)—Lori Vallow Daybell is back in Idaho, where she will spend the rest of her life behind bars. New video from the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office in Arizona shows Daybell leaving their facility.

She was booked into the Idaho Department of Corrections at Pocatello Women’s Correctional Center.

Daybell has been held in Maricopa County’s Estrella jail in Arizona since November 2023.

While in Arizona, Daybell was convicted of conspiring to murder her former husband and her niece’s husband. She was sentenced to life in prison.

In Idaho, she is serving a life sentence for the deaths of her children, JJ Vallow and Tylee Ryan, and conspiring to kill her current husband’s first wife, Tammy Daybell.

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ABC-7 at 4: ReadyOne Abilities in Action

Nichole Gomez

El Paso, TX (KVIA-TV)- El Paso-based garment manufacturer Ready-One Industries specializes in a diverse range of products.  Lincoln Smith, the ready-one vice president and chief operating officer, along with ready-one sewing machine operator David Fernandez, spoke about the benefits of the company.

Website: ReadyOne.jobs

Address: 1414 Ability Dr, El Paso, TX 79936

Phone number: 915-858-7277 Ext. 1137 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ReadyOneIndustries

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/readyoneindustries/

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/readyoneindustries/posts/?feedView=all

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Kehoe appoints Hanaway as next attorney general

Marie Moyer

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

With Attorney General Andrew Bailey set to head to Washington, D.C., this September to work for the FBI after being tapped by Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel, Gov. Mike Kehoe has appointed the state’s first female Speaker of the House.

Kehoe said Tuesday that Catherine Hanaway will take over Sept. 8. She will be the state’s first female attorney general.

“Catherine will be and is tough on crime, and we look forward to continuing our partnership with the Attorney General’s office under her leadership and our number one priority, which is public safety,” Kehoe said.

Hanaway was a Republican House Speaker from 2003-05, the only woman to hold the post. During her time in the Missouri House, Hanaway was one of the main sponsors of a 2003 concealed carry bill. The bill was initially vetoed by then-Governor Bob Holden and later overruled by the General Assembly.

Hanaway also served as a U.S. Attorney, focusing on drug trafficking and child exploitation. She also sued the Texas company Cathedral Rock Corp. in 2007 for the mistreatment of elders in several St. Louis retirement homes.

“Working with local prosecutors, sheriffs, police and the highway patrol fighting crime is and will remain job one for this office,” Hanaway said. “I look forward to having a close and collaborative relationship with law enforcement as I did when I was United States attorney.”

Bailey, a Republican, previously challenged COVID-19 masking in schools as well as gender-affirming care such as puberty blockers. Bailey also created the anti-human trafficking task force and was a strong supporter of pro-law enforcement legislation.

Bailey also has a record as a state official loyal to President Donald Trump, supporting administration policies with dozens of legal filings since he took office in January 2023. Former Gov. Mike Parson appointed Bailey in 2022, and he was elected in 2024.

Democratic House Minority Leader Rep. Ashley Aune said in a statement Monday that the House Minority Caucus hopes Kehoe will appoint a “competent attorney general.”

“Bailey’s departure gives the governor an opportunity to appoint a competent and professional attorney general who will defend the rights of all Missourians instead of wasting taxpayer money on frivolous culture war lawsuits that regularly get laughed out of court,” Aune said.

Following Kehoe’s decision, Aune called Hanaway “a solid upgrade as Attorney General.”

“Catherine Hanaway will be a vast improvement over her incompetent and unprofessional predecessor,” Aune said in a prepared statement. “One question is which Catherine Hanaway will we get as attorney general: The one who served capably and honorably as House speaker and U.S. attorney, or the one who intensely fought to help Eric Greitens cling to power while facing impeachment. But unless she proves us wrong, House Democrats believe she can restore integrity to the office.”

Other supporters of Hanaway include Ranking Minority Member of the House Judiciary Committee Representative David Tyson Smith (D-Columbia) and Ranking Minority Member of the House Crime and Public Safety Committee Mark Sharp (D-Kansas City)

“Catherine Hanaway is a solid pick and was a good Speaker of the House,” Smith said in a statement. “Hopefully, she will maintain that posture moving forward and will restore confidence in that office.”

“In today’s political climate, it can be very tempting for leaders to take part in partisan politics and it can also be tempting for opponents to focus solely on one person — the Attorney General,” Sharp said in a statement. “This appointment provides a fresh opportunity for the office to demonstrate fairness, integrity and a strong commitment to public service.”

Chair of the Senate Transportation, Infrastructure and Public Safety Sen. Travis Fitzwater (R-Holts Summit) called Kehoe’s pick “inspiring,” adding, “We look forward to working with her.”

Hanaway works for the law firm Husch Blackwell, representing white collar clients in areas such as lobbying law, fraud and money laundering. One of her clients is the Grain Belt Express, a renewable energy project that Bailey staunchly opposed.

Hanaway did not say how she plans to act as attorney general on the Grain Belt suit; however, she will remove herself from the case.

“Since I had that matter in private practice when I switched over to the Attorney General’s office, I’ll have to recuse myself, but the team that is there, the great team that is there, will be able to go forward without my input,” Hanaway said.

The Missouri Farm Bureau has previously criticized Grain Belt Express. In a statement, the group thanked Bailey for his hard work and added that they expect Hanaway to do the same.

Missouri agriculture has a true friend in Andrew Bailey, and he has been an unwavering advocate for farmers and ranchers,” MOFB President Garrett Hawkins said, “The list of issues we face as an industry is long, and we expect, as Attorney General, she will continue the work championed by her predecessors.”

Kehoe added that he continues to be a supporter of private property and will continue to work towards property protection.

“I’ve said all along,  I’m a big believer in private property rights, and if I had a century farm and somebody came and said I used eminent domain and I’m going to go across your farm now, I wouldn’t be very happy about it either,” Kehoe said.

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Pope Leo appoints new bishop for Diocese of Jefferson City

News-Press NOW

Gabrielle Teiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Pope Leo XIV has chosen Father Ralph O’Donnell as the Bishop-Elect for the Diocese of Jefferson City, according to a press release.

The Diocese will hold a press conference at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Cathedral of St. Joseph on W. Main St. in Jefferson City.

O’Donnell was born in Omaha, Nebraska and was ordained as a priest there in 1997. He is currently the pastor of St. Margaret Mary Parish in Omaha.

“I’m grateful to the Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, for this appointment. I look forward to coming to know and to serve the people of the Diocese of Jefferson City with joy. Let us pray for one another in the days ahead,” says a statement from O’Donnell.

O’Donnell was chosen as the fifth bishop to lead the diocese after Most Reverend Shawn McKnight was installed as Archbishop of Kansas City, Kansas, back in May. McKnight was chosen to lead the diocese by the late Pope Francis in April.

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Fire destroys a mobile home in Niland

Karina Bazarte

NILAND, Calif. (KYMA, KECY) – A mobile home was completely destroyed after it caught on fire in Niland Sunday night.

The Imperial County Fire Department (ICFD) says no one was in or near the mobile home at the time of the fire.

“It took about an hour for units to clear the scene but we had initial knocked out with in the 15 minutes of the call,” said Cedric Ceseña with ICFD.

Fire crews say no one was on the property Sunday night when the fire started, but it looks like the place was still being used.

ICFD says one of the challenges was the lack of water in the area.

“What we work is making sure we have the equipment to bring water into these emergencies, so we have water tenders or water tanks that [brings] 2,500 gallons of water at a time in order for us to fight the fire. For example, this fire more less it took about 1,300 gallons of water to put out,” said Ceseña.

Firefighters says it’s difficult to know where the fire started or how, but it’s under investigation.

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Toddler in El Centro dies after being left in hot car

Karina Bazarte

EL CENTRO, Calif. (KYMA, KECY) – A toddler in El Centro dies after being left inside a hot car Monday, according to the El Centro Police Department (ECPD).

According to a press release, officers responded to the area of Woodward Avenue and N. Seventh Street at around 5:30 p.m. after receiving reports of an unresponsive toddler.

Upon arrival, ECPD says officers performed lifesaving measures, and the child was taken to El Centro Regional Medical Center.

However, ECPD said despite efforts by officers and medical personnel, the child later died at the hospital.

ECPD says the child had been left alone inside a vehicle “for an extended period of time,” and the child’s father, a 37-year-old man from El Centro, was arrested for “various charges related to the child’s death.”

The investigation remains ongoing. If anyone has any information regarding the case, call (760) 352-2111, visit ECPD headquarters in person, or reach out to their social media platforms.

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Crews removing 40+ trees on two Pueblo streets in advance of repaving project

Scott Harrison

PUEBLO, Colo. — Residents along Saratoga Road in the north side Belmont community are happy to hear that their crumbling street will finally get repaved this season.

But it comes with a heavy price: The removal of 41 trees between the sidewalks and curbs.

“I guess I’d rather have good roads,” said neighbor Duke Wright. “But I hate to see the trees go.”

Chuck Roy, the city’s acting public works director, stated that the trees must be cut down because they have large, deep roots that have already damaged the concrete infrastructure and would undermine a repaving job if left in place.

“You know, I don’t like removing 40 trees,” he said. “I really don’t. And I know that we’ve been in contact — and some of the neighbors have made contact — with groups like Trees Please and our National Arbor Society, to try and get some trees maybe donated, so that people who wanted to, could plant the trees again, obviously on their side of the sidewalk and hopefully not back in that parkway area where in 30 years we have to do this all over again.”

Some neighbors were surprised to learn that the trees are not on their property, but in the city’s right-of-way.

Roy said that a concrete crew will closely follow the tree crew to repair and replace broken concrete as quickly as possible; roots have lifted entire sidewalk sections in many areas.

He added that he hopes the entire project will be finished by the end of September.

Some trees will also be removed on Lexington Road, a block west of Saratoga.

The city is having a late start to its paving season, which normally begins in late spring, for a variety of reasons that will be explained in an upcoming Road Warrior segment.

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