Salinas Valley prisoner convicted for allegedly causing life-threatening stab injuries

Mickey Adams

MONTEREY COUNTY, Calif. (KION-TV) — The Monterey County District Attorney announced the conviction of a life prisoner in Salinas Valley State Prison over two separate stabbings.

In February of 2023, Moises Meraz Espinoza allegedly attacked his cellmate after evening lockdown, stabbing him more than 20 times and causing life threatening injuries.

In November of 2024, Espinoza was seen walking up to another inmate in the prison yard before stabbing him, also causing life threatening injuries.

He was found guilty of the two assaults and is scheduled to be sentenced on August 27.

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Greek Festival welcomes several at Chase Palm Park for another year

Caleb Nguyen

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – The Greek Festival in Santa Barbara has a new location but the same cultural celebration of the Mediterranean.

The Santa Barbara Greek Orthodox Church moved its long-time celebration from Oak Park to the waterfront, but still offered authentic Greek food, live music, traditional dancing and a new backdrop for the festival.

Crowds are enjoying performances by local Greek dance groups — with plenty of opportunities to join in and learn the steps — along with the sounds of “The 4 Greeks.”

Food booths are serving gyros, hummus and pita, loukoumades, spanakopita, Greek salad, baklava, souvlaki, saganaki and pastitsio.

Drinks include local draft beers, imported Greek beers, Greek wine tastings and Loux imported Greek sodas.

The festival continues through Saturday and you can find more information at the Fesitval’s website.

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Firefighters beginning to head home as Gifford Fire containment numbers continue to rise

Dave Alley

SANTA MARGARITA, Calif. – With containment numbers of the Gifford Fire rising on a daily basis, demobilization of the Incident Command Post in Santa Margarita is now underway.

“We’re in the demobiliozation phase for a lot of the engines,” said Gifford Fire information officer Rich Eagan. “Now, you’ll probably see close to 800 to 1,000 per day for the next, I would say 96 hours or so.”

At one point the base camp at the Santa Margarita Ranch number nearly 5,000 personnel.

However, with the containment of the fire at 61% as of Friday afternoon, personnel at the camp can begin to reduce after firefighters made significant strides in putting out the blaze over the few days.

“I’ve been doing this job for 35 years now, and I’ve never seen a fire effectively manage so quickly in my career,” said Eagan, who works with the Chula Vista Fire Department. “We basically, contained 130,000 plus acres in about two weeks time, so that’s very impressive to me.”

Eagan credits two main factors that helped crews get a handle on the fire, especially on the northern flank in the hillsides east of Santa Margarita, near Pozo.

“The major components were that backfiring and the cooling of temperatures and the increase in humidity,” said Eagan. “The weather has been very favorable. Guys are going to get this thing buttoned up soon.”

On Friday, the hillsides near Pozo looked nothing like they did just 48 hours earlier when flames, both from the main fire, combined with those that were intentionally set during the burning operation, scorched the landscape, producing a huge plume of smoke that could seen across the Central Coast.

“(You can see) the success,” said Jonathan Harris, San Diego City Fire Department Captain. “There’s no smoke in the sky, no plume. There’s probably little hotspots there, but as it was the day before, there was large fire behavior, but now there’s nothing that’s going on and it shows your success and how hard we worked out.”

Even as containment numbers continue to climb, firefighters point out it’s still not fully extinguished and their efforts are still needed for the next several days at least.

“There’s still work to be done,” said Darrell Roberts, Chula Vista Fire Department Strike Team Leader. “We’re not dropping our guard on the fire. A lot of the resources worked really, really hard yesterday in the firing operation to make sure that we can turn the corner on this fire and hopefully put to bed in the next series of days here.”

While there was no major plume of smoke on Friday, firefighters were still very much in action in the hillsides, especially near Pozo along Hi Mountain Road where flames burned just hours earlier.

“We don’t have it fully suppressed, but we’re getting closer,” said Eagan. “Now, we’re just basically in what we refer to as the mop up phase. Hitting the lines and using hand tools, that kind of thing to suppress this fire. We’re almost there, but not yet.”

Still, with the situation vastly improved, some of the crews members packed up Friday and headed out, leaving the Santa Margarita camp they’ve called home the past several days.

“It’s a great feeling to know you’re heading home with your loved ones,” said Harris. “They haven’t seen us in a while, so it’s good to give them a phone call and let them know you’re coming home. The excitement that your loved ones hear that you’re coming home is pretty good.”

As the crews head in all directions to their homes across California, those on the Central Coast should expect to see fire engines filled with happy firefighters on local roadways over the next several days.

“Our folks are going to go home,” said Roberts. “They’re going to say hello to their families. They’re going to decompress for a day and most of our folks will jump on a fire engine in their hometown and they’ll continue to serve in a neighborhood where they’ve been serving for decades, some of them, and we’ll prepare all our gear to come right back out, and most likely, the chances are that we will.”  

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First draft of California’s redrawn congressional district maps released

Jesus Reyes

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KESQ) – California officially released the first draft of redrawn congressional districts on Friday.

One of the major districts that would be changed would be Rep. Ken Calvert’s. Calvert currently represents the 41st district, which covers a portion of the Coachella Valley.

The proposed revision would change the district to District 48, keeping most of the Coachella Valley but expanding further west and south.

Draft of District 48

Current District 41

The draft release comes after Governor Gavin Newsom’s announcement that California will move forward with putting proposed new congressional maps on the ballot in a November special election.

081525-kgo-ca-redistricting-maps-pdf-compressed-draftDownload

News Channel 3’s Peter Daut spoke with Calvert about the proposed change.

“Are you concerned this will affect your district?” Peter

Calvert said, “Oh, they want to eliminate my district. They can’t get me at the election box, so they want to do it through gerrymandering in an unfair process.”

“Are you concerned you could be out of a job soon?” Peter asked

“I’ve done the best I can, I’ll continue to do the best I can. I intend to run in the 41st Congressional District, because I think this initiative will be defeated,” Calvert said.

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Heather Quinn wins 2025 Waterston Desert Prize; High Desert Museum event to feature award-winning author Dan Flores

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Heather Quinn, a Minnesota-based writer, photographer and filmmaker, has been officially selected as the winner of the 11th annual Waterston Desert Writing Prize by guest judge and author Beth Piatote, Ph.D.

The Waterston Desert Writing Prize, established in 2014 by author and Oregon Poet Laureate Ellen Waterston, honors and fosters literary nonfiction that celebrates desert landscapes.  

Quinn’s winning submission is titled This Is How You Disappear, a project about the California desert. Quinn, who receives a $3,000 cash prize, will give a reading and discuss their project at the Waterston Desert Writing Prize ceremony on Thursday, September 25, 2025.

The event features award-winning author Dan Flores, Ph.D., who will give a talk titled, “The Coyote Is the Dude, the Dude Abides, and the Adventures Continue,” during the ceremony.

Flores, author of Coyote America and Wild New World, has spent his career exploring the connections between people and the natural world in America and the West. His books have won several awards including the Rachel Carson Environmental Book Prize and the Sigurd Olson Nature Writing Prize. The author of 11 books, Flores has also written for the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune and Time Magazine.

His presentation at the award ceremony will delve into how coyotes have preserved wildness in modern America, making a case for understanding wild animals as distinctive individuals.

Quinn, who lives in St. Paul, Minnesota, with their husband and two young daughters, writes personal and lyric essays. They approach nonfiction from a journalistic background, including a deep appreciation of truth telling.

The winning submission This Is How You Disappear is an essay blending personal narrative, reporting and historical research to explore trauma, ecological collapse and memory in the California desert, particularly around the Salton Sea. For over two decades, Quinn has documented the region through writing, photography and film, bearing witness to its shifting landscapes and layered histories.

Quinn earned their Master of Fine Arts at Portland State University, and they were a 2021 McKnight Artist Fellow, a 2023 Writing Resident at Art Omi, and a 2022 Tin House Winter Workshop Scholar. Their work has appeared in Fourth Genre, Vela, Longreads and elsewhere. 

Waterston said that Quinn’s piece “promises fearless writing that skillfully enlists the landscape of the Salton Sea as backdrop to their quest for understanding” an emotional moment in their life.

Piatote, a Nez Perce scholar, writer, professor and language activist, will also speak during the Waterston event at the Museum. Piatote is the author of two books, including a mixed-genre collection entitled The Beadworkers: Stories (2019), which was featured on NPR and was selected as the “one read” for multiple university and community programs. Dedicated to Nez Perce language and literature, she cofounded the Designated Emphasis in Indigenous Language Revitalization at the University of California Berkeley, where she teaches English and Comparative Literature.

“We are honored to welcome our outstanding winner Heather Quinn and award-winning authors Dan Flores and Beth Piatote to this year’s Waterston Desert Writing Prize ceremony,” said Museum Executive Director Dana Whitelaw, Ph.D. “Their passionate exploration of the natural world aligns perfectly with the Prize’s mission to celebrate and elevate desert landscapes through the power of literary nonfiction.”

The two finalists for this year’s Prize are Taylor Luck and Charles Hood.

Luck, a journalist living in the Middle East, blends narrative writing with authentic storytelling. His submission, Beyond the Jordan, focuses on modern-day Jordan and the varied groups of people navigating a region in upheaval. Luck weaves his personal journey of belonging into the narrative.

Located in Palmdale, California, Hood has traveled the world for his writings, from the high Arctic to the South Pole, and from Tibet to West Africa and the Amazon. His submission, Desert Fire, takes him closer to home as it delves into the past, present and future role of fire in Western American deserts.

A writer with continued contributions to nonfiction prose about desert regions, Hood is being recognized this year for the first-ever Obsidian Prize, a $2,000 award in honor of his contributions to the Waterston Desert Writing Prize. A prolific poet and essayist, Hood has written several books, including the essay collection A Salad Only the Devil Would Eat: The Joys of Ugly Nature, which was named the Nonfiction Book of the Year by the editors of Foreword book review.  

In 2020, the High Desert Museum—which has long hosted events for the Prize—adopted the program. The mission and goals of the Prize complement those of the High Desert Museum, emphasizing the importance of protecting deserts and creating important conversations about the issues affecting them.

To learn more about the Waterston Desert Writing Prize and to purchase your tickets to the Waterston Desert Writing Prize Ceremony, visit: highdesertmuseum.org/waterston-prize.

ABOUT THE MUSEUM:

The HIGH DESERT MUSEUM opened in Bend, Oregon in 1982. It brings together wildlife, cultures, art, history and the natural world to convey the wonder of North America’s High Desert. The Museum is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, is a Smithsonian Affiliate, was the 2019 recipient of the Western Museums Association’s Charles Redd Award for Exhibition Excellence and was a 2021 recipient of the National Medal for Museum and Library Service. To learn more, visit highdesertmuseum.org and follow us on FacebookInstagram and TikTok.

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Bend Police warn residents about use of electric motorcycles

Triton Notary

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ)– Bend Police are sounding the alarm on electric motorcycles. These are different than e-bikes and are illegal on the road. Electric motorcycles are anything that goes above 28 MPH or does not have pedals. Police have seen an increase in young kids riding these motorcycles on sidewalks and city streets, all of which is illegal. They ask parents and the public to be aware of these rules.

Here is what the Bend Police Department had to say on Facebook.

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Yuma City Council heading to statewide conference

Eduardo Morales

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – Members from the Yuma City Council will be making their way to Phoenix for the League of Arizona Cities and Towns.

Highly elected officials such as state senators and Governor Katie Hobbs have been known to stop by from time to time.

The conference is a three-day brainstorming event for city leaders to bounce ideas off of each other and collaborate on ways to improve their cities.

“We share with a lot of other communities, but then we get an opportunity to learn from each other and explore ideas that you know we may or may not have the time to sit down and think about ourselves,” said Yuma Mayor Doug Nicholls.

The conference discusses some hot button issues such as AI, economic development, and Arizona’s water future.

City Council member Art Morales says he has been hearing a need for daycares from locals, so he has decided to use the conference as an opportunity to find some answers.

“I already have a meeting with somebody when I’m up there from ‘First Things First’ to just bounce ideas and figure out what we can do from a local level to help employers provide an opportunity for their employees to either come back to the workforce or go back to school,” Morales says.

The event will take place next week from August 19-22, cancelling Yuma City Council meetings for those days.

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Locals fundraising for teen recovering from multiple surgeries

Eduardo Morales

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – 19-year-old Noah Illingsworth suffered through a blood aneurysm that burst earlier this year.

Since then, she has had three surgeries and is still trying to recover.

Now, Melissa Miller is a local who is donating her commission from selling candles to help Noah recover.

“I knew I had to help someway, and through my candles, that’s the way of helping that I’m able to…so, it really makes my heart happy just knowing that I’m able to help out and do something good for the community,” Miller says.

If you would like to donate to the GoFundMe, you can click on the link HERE. Meanwhile, you can go to buy some candles from Miller on her FaceBook page HERE.

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U.S. government adds Mexicali Valley to high-risk travel list amid crime surge

Paul Vozzella

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – The U.S. government has officially added the Mexicali Valley region to its list of high-risk travel destinations due to a sharp increase in violent crime.

The decision comes after months of rising criminal activity in the area, which lies just south of the U.S.-Mexico border near Yuma, Arizona.

“We’ve always known that there’s been challenges in the Mexicali Valley,” said Jonathan Lines, Chairman of the Board for the Border Security Alliance and Yuma County Supervisor. “They’ve actually found quite a few assets of the cartels in those areas over the past four months. So I’m grateful the government has taken the precautions to warn people about those areas.”

According to Lines, more than 500 assassinations and murders have occurred in the past four years within a 60-mile radius of Yuma, underscoring the scale of violence in the region.

The travel advisory has sparked mixed reactions among American citizens. Some, like Stephen Craig, say the warning is justified and are changing their behavior accordingly.

“I’m more cautious about going into Mexico…very much more cautious,” Craig said.

Others, like American citizen Dave, haven’t experienced any problems and are puzzled by the warning.

“It’s the first time I’ve been down here and I’ve had no issues; it’s been perfect. I don’t understand why the government would do that,” he said.

Despite differing opinions from travelers, local officials say the move is necessary to prioritize safety.

“We’re very much in support of this administration’s crackdown to provide a more focused national security effort…to keep the trafficking, both human and narcotics, out of the region,” Lines said.

As tensions along the U.S.-Mexico border continue to rise, officials urge travelers to stay informed and cautious when considering trips to areas under heightened advisory.

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Super Burrito 3 closes under unusual circumstances

Tyson Beauchemin

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — A secondary location of the popular local restaurant ‘Super Burrito’ appears to be closed. The doors are locked, and the lights are out. Google lists ‘Super Burrito 3’ on Northeast Windy Knolls Drive as “permanently closed.”

A note posted on the door says the landlord has taken possession of the suite, but does not list a reason. All the furniture, decor and equipment appear to be locked inside the restaurant.

KTVZ News has reached out to the owner of Super Burrito and Compass Commercial, the property management company that owns the suite. Neither have replied at this time.

The original Super Burrito location remains open.

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