Scripps News obtains video of accused Charlie Kirk shooter after 2022 car crash

By Lori Jane Gliha , Brittany Freeman

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    ST. GEORGE, Utah (Scripps News) — Scripps News obtained never-before-seen police video footage of Tyler Robinson, the man accused of shooting and killing conservative influencer Charlie Kirk.

The footage, from 2022, shows the aftermath of a fender bender in St. George, Utah, in which Robinson and another driver collided in an intersection. Police did not cite either driver and neither driver suffered visible injuries.

In the video, police learned Robinson had been driving an Audi when he slammed into a Ford sedan that was making a left turn in front of him.

Robinson, who was 19 at the time, appears cooperative during his interaction with the officer investigating the crash.

“(The other driver) would’ve been there going left, and as I was coming through, he turned in, and I T-boned into the side of him,” Robinson told the officer.

Robinson indicated that he had just put oil in his vehicle.

“I just – just as I left the house, I put oil in it. Just topped it off,” he said.

Robinson explained to the officer that he was driving with his brother and that he had contacted his mother to help provide his insurance information.

She arrived later to provide information to the officer.

Robinson is facing numerous charges, including aggravated murder in connection with the death of Kirk. Prosecutors said they plan to seek the death penalty. At his first court appearance this week, Robinson wore what appeared to be an anti-suicide smock and spoke only to state his name during the hearing.

Court records revealed he threatened to kill himself before his parents and a family friend facilitated a peaceful surrender.

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Pueblo Chile & Frijoles Festival to feature new safety & security measure this weekend

Scott Harrison

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) — Well before dawn on Friday, workers began closing off some downtown streets, intersections, and even alleys and parking lots, to establish a secure perimeter for the 31st annual Chile & Frijoles Festival.

However, fences, signs, and barricades aren’t enough to stop someone intent on causing harm by driving through an event perimeter and into crowds — something that has, tragically, resulted in injuries and deaths elsewhere.

Pueblo officials said that they have had no such threat of a so-called “vehicle ramming attack” at an outdoor event.

“But when you have 100,000 people at a festival like this, you have to be proactive with safety and security,” said Donielle Kitzman, vice president of the Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce.

So, this year, for the first time, organizers will use a system of bollards at four key street locations to prevent someone from driving into a crowd.

In the bollard system, metal bars are placed inside metal supports in a concrete base in a street; the bars are locked into place to prevent an unauthorized person from tampering with them.

Chuck Roy, Pueblo’s public works director, said he recently saw the devices in action during a demonstration in Kansas City.

“Denver has them, too,” he explained. “Ultimately, from the time frame when we started looking for this year, early August, we only had time to install four locations. We do have plans and hope to do more of the parade routes and more of the Chile Festival area. But we started with the most important areas.”

Roy said that the city paid $700 for each set of 24 bollards that will be used for festivals and other outdoor events; workers will erect the posts ahead of the festival’s 3 p.m. start.

A similar system already exists around City Hall.

Kyle Groves, who grew up in Pueblo, later moved to Texas and has performed as a magician at the festival since 2010.

“I actually didn’t know they were doing it until I got here this morning and saw that it had been set up for it,” he said. “This is awesome. This is great.”

Festival organizers have also taken steps to address parking lost to street closures.

Attendees can park for free at the three downtown parking garages and board free shuttles to and from the festival; shuttles will also pick up and drop off passengers at the Midtown Center.

For more festival information, visit: https://pueblochilefestival.com/.

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Fremont High School class of 1950 celebrates final reunion 75 years later

By Jill Lamkins

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    FREMONT, Nebraska (KMTV) — There are a lot of memories in this building on 10th and Main for the Fremont High School class of 1950. While it’s now home to the school district office, these Tigers never forgot where they came from and are celebrating their final reunion together, 75 years later.

With a graduating class of around 190, 15 old classmates made it out to the Fremont Golf Club to celebrate their diamond jubilee reunion.

“We are a very close class. We’ve been close throughout the many many years of getting together,” said Bill Jensen.

These friends have gotten together nearly every year since graduating, and although the group has gotten smaller, their bond has never faltered.

“And then the more you get together the closer you get when you’re older,” said LaVonne Nelsen.

Now in their 90s, getting together isn’t as easy anymore, so they’ve decided this will be their last reunion. But they’ll cherish every moment.

“I loved choir, I loved journalism and I loved being a cheerleader for so many years,” said Verla McClay.

“Yeah I was a cheerleader,” said Ruth Walther Albright.

When asked about her cheerleading days, Albright’s daughter could be heard off camera saying she brought her pom poms to the reunion.

Among the laughs and memories shared was also a moment to honor the classmates they’ve lost.

“We hold you close within our hearts and there you will remain to walk and guide us through our lives until we meet again,” said Jessie Waterman.

This milestone of reuniting 75 years after high school doesn’t happen often. To honor it, Fremont Mayor Joey Spellerberg issued a proclamation declaring Sept. 18, 2025, FHS Class of 1950s Day.

“We got along. We got along without TV. We didn’t have any air conditioning, we didn’t have any cell phones but we succeeded. Our generation is called the silent generation for a reason. We were very thrifty. We got more for our dollar I’ll tell you that,” Jensen said.

These classmates want to encourage the next generation to cherish the bonds you make, because they might just last you a lifetime.

“You always have opportunities to make new friends but don’t ever forget those old friends,” McClay said.

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Apparent human remains found during luggage check at Tampa airport: CBP

By WFTS Digital Staff

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    TAMPA, Florida (WFTS) — Apparent human remains were found in a luggage check at Tampa International Airport (TPA), according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

Tampa and Miami Director of Field Operations Carlos C. Martel posted via the social media platform X what started as a passenger declaring just 10 cigars at TPA turned bizarre.

According to the post, CBP agriculture specialists found prohibited plants, undeclared cigars, and “a foil-wrapped duffel bag containing what looked like human remains, including part of a skull.”

Martel said the traveler claimed the items were for rituals.

Officials noted they seized the items and destroyed them due to serious health risks.

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‘I get up’: Doctor, 105, shares his daily philosophy for a life well-lived

By Victor Jorges

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    ATLANTIS, Florida (WPTV) — Making it to 105 is a big deal – but according to Dr. Theodore Gerson’s family, what’s even more impressive is everything he’s accomplished since calling Palm Beach County home back in the 1950s.

Our cameras were rolling as this local hero received quite the surprise: his loved ones decorated his entire front yard to celebrate this incredible milestone birthday.

“Happy 105th Theodore!” read the colorful signs adorning his property.

Inside his home, WPTV reporter Victor Jorges asked Gerson the question everyone wants answered: What’s his secret to making it 105 years?

“I wish I knew,” he said. “I’d never dreamed that I would live this long.”

But all jokes aside, Gerson did share his daily philosophy – the mindset that gets him out of bed each morning after doing so for more than a century.

“I don’t have the drive to get up at this age, but I get up, because I know there’s daylight coming through the window, and I know it isn’t healthy to lie in bed all day long,” he said.

Gerson has built quite the legacy here in Palm Beach County. His family estimates that during his 41 years as a practicing physician, he helped deliver more than 7,000 babies.

“It wasn’t a normal life,” he said. “I almost never had a night’s sleep uninterrupted. If I did, I woke up thinking there must be something wrong with the phone.”

But ask Gerson about his biggest accomplishment, and he won’t mention the countless deliveries or medical procedures. Instead, he focuses on something more personal – the relationships he built with thousands of families over the decades.

“What I’m proud of is the great number of people that I had as patients who felt that I had done a good job,” he said. “It was something I never dreamt I’d ever feel, but it was a warm feeling. It was like having a giant family in one town.”

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Palm Springs hosts POW/MIA flag-raising ceremony in front of city hall

Allie Anthony

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – The City of Palm Springs hosted a POW/MIA flag-raising ceremony on Friday, Sept morning in front of City Hall in honor of National POW/MIA Recognition Day.

Mayor Ron deHarte, City Councilmembers, Police Chief Andy Mills, Assemblyman Jeff Gonzalez (R-Indio), and members of American Legion Post 519 took part in the ceremony.

The POW/MIA flag will be flown at all City buildings that day as a tribute to American prisoners of war and those still missing in action. As of 2025, around 81,600 U.S. service members and civilians remain missing or unaccounted for from World War II through more recent conflicts. On National POW/MIA Recognition Day, Palm Springs honors the ongoing efforts to bring them home.

In June, the City Council approved flying the flag annually on Memorial Day, Veterans Day, and National POW/MIA Recognition Day.

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Senior’s kindness leads to dream concert experience with Nine Inch Nails

By Jordan Bontke

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    MESA, Arizona (KNXV) — When 70-year-old Carla Well-Knight received grim news about her health, she didn’t let it stop her from spreading kindness throughout her Mesa senior living facility. That generosity recently came back to her in a loud and unforgettable way.

Well-Knight’s life is like a never-ending, versatile playlist. Her musical tastes range from Jefferson Airplane, Jethro Tull, and from her younger days to mood-setting Motown and classical quartets on Sundays.

“Probably cello is my favorite instrument,” Well-Knight said.

But a closer look at her 70-year musical catalog reveals one genre that stands out above the rest — she’s a rocker through and through.

“Korn is probably my second favorite band,” she said.

Well-Knight loves Tool, A Perfect Circle and Linkin Park, but this 70-year-old’s all-time favorite artist is Nine Inch Nails.

“He does write a lot of things about death,” she said.

Those songs about death hit differently these days. Well-Knight is receiving hospice care at her Mesa senior living facility as she battles a spreading form of breast cancer. This comes a few years after cancer took her husband.

But grim news from doctors and dark music didn’t diminish Well-Knight’s kindness.

“I believe the more you give, the more you get back. Always. And I love giving things away,” she said.

When her neighbors needed walkers and wheelchairs, Well-Knight didn’t hesitate to offer up extras from her home. That generosity led a caretaker to nominate her for AARP’s Wish of a Lifetime program, which reconnects seniors with their passions.

Her wish was granted in the form of floor seats to see Nine Inch Nails at PHX Arena. There she was, in the middle of the mosh pit, rocking out just feet from frontman Trent Reznor.

Well-Knight says she’s at peace when her playlist does come to an end. She believes the best way to live life is when kindness is turned all the way up.

“The two words: be kind. What you say might cheer them up in a way you don’t know,” she said.

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

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Woman claims funeral home stored husband’s ashes for 28 years without notice

By Randy Wimbley

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    HOLLY, Michigan (WXYZ) — For more than 30 years, 85-year-old Daisy Marshall believed her husband’s ashes were safely contained in an urn at her home. Now she’s not sure whose remains she’s been keeping.

“Where had those ashes been for all that time, and whose ashes did I have?” Marshall said.

The shocking discovery came in 2022 when Marshall was making her own prearrangements at Great Lakes National Cemetery. She wanted to be cremated and interred with her husband, Charles, an Air Force veteran. That’s when cemetery staffers delivered devastating news.

“They told me that somebody, well, somebody was interred under my husband’s ID already. And the ashes had been delivered there in December of 2018,” Marshall said.

Marshall had believed she received all of her husband’s remains at his memorial service in 1991, which was conducted by Wilson-Akins Funeral Homes.

“I had been presented with what I thought was my husband’s remains, all of his remains at the memorial service in 1991,” she said.

The funeral home is now involved in an ongoing legal dispute with Marshall over the handling of her husband’s ashes.

An attorney representing the funeral home claims Marshall requested only a portion of her husband’s ashes and that the rest be stored at the facility for her to pick up. The lawyer says she never did, and those cremains remained there for nearly 28 years.

Marshall disputes this account entirely.

“That conversation never happened. It never happened,” Marshall said. “Even if the conversation had taken place, I was supposed to be given, according to what I’ve read, some written communication to pick those ashes up.”

The state ordered the funeral home to give a proper final disposition to all of their unclaimed cremains in 2018, at which point they were sent to Great Lakes National Cemetery. Marshall would discover this by chance four years later.

“Shock, disbelief,” Marshall says.

Marshall is pursuing a lawsuit, hoping to ensure no one else has the same experience that she and, allegedly, other families endured.

“Three other veterans’ ashes were interred there or stored there, I should say. Two of those veterans had been there over 31 years, and one, over 10 years,” Marshall said.

The state’s Mortuary Science Unit investigated the matter and cleared the funeral home of any wrongdoing, but the legal fight over what happened continues.

Wilson-Aikins Funeral Homes Statement from Attorney Brunette Brandy:

In the matter involving Daisy Marshall v. Wilson-Aikens Funeral Home, please be advised that my client has complied with all state regulations relating to the Mortuary Science Licensing Division as attached. Mrs. Daisy Marshall contracted with Wilson-Aikens Funeral Home to provide for the cremation of her husband’s remains. She arranged for those cremated remains to be delivered to her at the funeral home where services were held. Wilson-Aikens delivered the cremated remains, to Mrs. Daisy Marshall at the funeral home.

Mrs. Marshall did not want all of the ashes and only took part of the ashes and directed Mr. Aikens to only give her part of the cremated remains and asked that the rest of the cremated remains to go back to Wilson-Aikens Funeral Home for storage. Wilson-Aikens Funeral Home delivered the ashes to Mrs. Marshall at the church. Once Mrs. Marshall rejected taking the entire delivery of the cremated remains, as she only wanted part of the ashes, she was under a duty to pick up the ashes at the Wilson-Aikens Funeral Home.

Wilson-Aikens Funeral Home stored the cremated remains for an extended period of 27 years, from 1991 to 2018. In 2018, the State of Michigan, LARA Mortuary Science Licensing Division, inspected the funeral home and directed Mr. Aikens to transfer the cremated remains to the National Cemetery, which was done.

At no time during the 27-year period did Ms. Marshall come in to claim the remaining cremated remains. Once Mr. Marshall delivered the cremated remains and she accepted only part of the remains, it was an obligation upon her to claim the cremated tome to Wilson-Aikens Funeral Home and claim the cremated remains.

Mrs. Aikens’ prolonged inaction and lack of communication contributed to this dispute and disposition of the cremated remains. The funeral home exceeded its obligation by storing these cremated remains, which were unclaimed for 27 years.

This matter was reviewed in its entirety by the State of Michigan LARA Mortuary Science Unit, pursuant to a complaint of Daisy Marshall. The State of Michigan concluded that there was a proper disposition of the cremated matters. And there was no violations of the law or regulation.

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OSBI gives inmates playing cards to help solve cold cases

By Sharon Phillips

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    OKLAHOMA CITY (KJRH) — Since 2017, the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation has been distributing unique card decks throughout state correctional facilities as part of an innovative approach to solving cold cases.

The concept is both simple and powerful: Every card features a real person whose life was cut short or who simply vanished without a trace.

“A few years ago, one of the initiatives that we had within OSBI was to produce some playing cards and to highlight or spotlight some of our cold cases on these cards whether that’s a missing person case or an unsolved homicide case,” said Dale Fine, an OSBI agent.

The strategy is surprisingly straightforward. Inmates naturally spend hours playing cards, so investigators decided to put unsolved cases directly in their hands.

Each deck becomes a constant reminder of these unresolved tragedies, featuring victim photos and crucial case details that might spark a memory or recognition.

The partnership between OSBI and the Oklahoma Department of Corrections ensures these decks reach inmates across the state prison system.

The hope is that someone shuffling through these cards will recognize a face, remember an overheard conversation or recall a crucial detail that could finally bring closure to a family that’s been waiting for answers.

“So we did a couple of series of these cards and basically put them out within the prison systems within Oklahoma, in turn trying to generate somebody coming across that card and that particular case on that card, maybe if they have that one piece of information that could be vital solving that case, hoping in turn that person would report that to the OSBI for further investigation,” Fine said.

For families still searching for answers, these playing cards represent something invaluable: hope that someone, somewhere, holds the key to finally bringing their loved one home or bringing their killer to justice.

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Good Vibes Only: Local teen’s art displayed at the El Paso Museum of Art

Rosemary Garcia

EL PASO, Texas (KVIA)— At just 16 years old, Desiree Arzaga’s artwork is now part of an exhibit at the El Paso Museum of Art.

It’s part of Enfoque Community Spotlight: EPISD Transformation Through Art. The exhibit highlights the work of 42 El Paso ISD high school students.

Desiree’s art teacher at Irvin High told her about the exhibit last year, and she immediately got to work.

“I drew a cathedral door that’s on Milan Cathedral. I just appreciate that art so much. So I wanted to draw it,  and I tried to do that the best I could.”

Desiree told ABC-7 that she worked on the piece for months and devoted countless hours to completing it. She said she worked on it during school and at home. It took nearly a year to complete.

Desiree’s art was only one of three selected at Irvin High, and then she advanced to the next phase.

Her art teacher, Delma Vargas, said Desiree was committed to perfecting her art piece.

“Desiree has always been the detail kind of girl. Anything that she draws, she makes it come to life. So when I saw her drawing, the detail, the intricate detail of every single piece, I was just wowed. I was; it’s phenomenal. I’ve never seen anything like it,” Vargas said.

Vargas said it was a difficult task selecting which pieces would move to the next round, but she was confident in all of her students’ abilities and creations.

“They communicate their emotions. They communicate their stories, their culture through these pieces. So it’s very important not only to teachers but to their students, for everybody to know what they’re about.”

Vargas said she was excited to see her students’ artwork on display at an art museum.

Desiree said her black-and-white piece challenged her as an artist.

“Actually. I don’t think I’ve ever had such a struggle. Like mentally, I was, like, a little bit overwhelmed. I was like, ‘Is this going to work? Should I restart?’ I actually did restart a couple times because I just didn’t like the way I measured the segments and everything, because it does involve architecture. So everything has to be symmetrical, or it had to look right. And I struggled with that because I’ve never done that. So I think this was the third attempt, the third big piece of paper, and it worked.”

She felt proud when she finally completed the piece, and it was a special moment when she saw it on display at the El Paso Museum of Art.

“When I was in the museum, I was like, wow, this is like, I did that. And it was such a good experience to see.”

Desiree also witnessed other art enthusiasts admire her work at the museum.

“I saw this woman, and she, like, got teary. She started tearing up, and I talked to her, and it just, it’s, like, a it’s such a crazy feeling, like I made something that affected someone in that way,” she said.

As an aspiring graphic design artist, Desiree said this special moment has motivated her to keep pursuing art.

“It was such a good experience to see it there. It made, like, everything, like all the stress that I had and those little doubts, it made all of that, like, worth it. Like, yes, like I did it. I did it.”

The junior said that while she isn’t currently taking any art classes, she is still very dedicated to art.

Desiree has been a busy student as she juggles her coursework between her high school classes and college-level classes. She is on track to receive her associate’s degree from EPCC at the same time she graduates high school.

The exhibition is on view through Sept. 30 at the El Paso Museum of Art, 1 Arts Festival Plaza.

If you have a Good Vibes Only idea, please e-mail news@kvia.com.

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