Utah Valley University students return to class one week after Charlie Kirk was killed on campus

CNN Newsource

By Lauren Mascarenhas, CNN

(CNN) — Students are returning to class Wednesday at Utah Valley University just days after prominent conservative activist Charlie Kirk was shot and killed at an event on campus, thrusting the community into the national spotlight.

Nyasha Paradzai, a UVU junior, said he was lined up in front of Kirk, waiting to debate him at the campus event, when he was killed.

“I was literally a few feet away from him and when the tragic shooting happened, I was squarely facing him, so I watched that unfold,” Paradzai told CNN in an interview Tuesday.

When Paradzai heard the pop from the shot that hit Kirk, the international student from Zimbabwe was confused. It was the first time he had ever heard a gunshot.

“In my world, you don’t hear guns,” Paradzai said.

“This was very new for me, not only to hear one, but to have it fired at someone right in front of you and have them bleed out in front of you was horrific,” he said.

Since that day, Paradzai said he’s been navigating “countless reminders of the event, countless things that have made me relive that.”

“Right now, I’m working to get that horrific image out of my head, because, you know, it’s almost every time you close your eyes, you see it again,” he said.

The somber task of returning to a campus that’s been host to deadly gun violence is an all-too-familiar experience for students in America.

The US has seen 47 school shootings this year alone – 24 of them on college campuses – which have left 19 people dead and at least 77 others injured, according to CNN’s analysis of events reported by the Gun Violence Archive, Education Week and Everytown for Gun Safety.

Paradzai said the targeted shooting has not necessarily shaken his sense of safety or pride in his school, he just hopes it will not embolden others to act in violence towards voices they differ with.

Paradzai is one of approximately 45,000 students who attend Utah Valley University, located in Orem, about 40 miles from Salt Lake City, making it the largest university in the state.

It’s an open-admissions university that boasts a welcoming attitude towards all kinds of students, guests and ideas. “UVU: A place for you,” the university’s tagline reads.

Despite its size, students say UVU hasn’t really been on the national radar, often overshadowed by the state’s big-name universities with high profile athletics teams.

That is, until last week.

After a dayslong manhunt, the suspect accused of killing Kirk was arrested and formally charged Tuesday with aggravated murder, among other offenses. Now the university is reopening its doors to students, with counseling and other support services for a shaken community.

“I don’t think it’s going to be something that we are going to forget overnight. It’s something that we’re going to have to grapple with for the next couple of weeks, months, maybe for the next couple of years,” Paradzai said.

‘I couldn’t stop shaking’

UVU junior Tiana Lao attended the event with her close friend and roommate. They were just feet away from Kirk when he was shot, Lao told CNN.

“Both me and my friend can still hear the gunshot clearly in our minds. We can’t get it out of our heads. It’s something that we can’t forget,” Lao said.

Lao and her friend returned to campus on Friday to fulfill one of the many media interview requests that had come in since the incident.

“I thought I was going to be fine until I got there,” she said. “My hands – I couldn’t stop shaking. And my heart was racing.”

In the minutes and hours following the shooting, graphic, close-up videos of the moment Kirk was hit promulgated across the internet. Seeing those videos again and again has elicited a visceral reaction Lao said she wasn’t expecting.

“I just think, if I’m feeling this way, if I’m getting this type of response – I was only sitting a few feet away from him – I can only imagine how it must have felt for those that were right in front of him,” she said.

Lao said she believes security could have been tighter on the day of Kirk’s appearance and is hoping the university will be ramping up safety measures as students return to class with the eyes of the nation on them.

Lao said she hasn’t been able to think clearly since the shooting.

“I’m just worried that the same thing is going to happen to me again as when I saw those videos and went back to campus. I’m just scared that I’m not going to be able to focus as well. I’m worried that I’m going to be too shaky, and my heart is going to be racing again.”

Thankfully, the university has been “relaxed” when it comes to those who need accommodations like extensions on assignments in light of the incident, she said.

Lao said she’s currently not on speaking terms with some friends who celebrated Kirk’s death.

“I feel like I’m personally connected to this event. I was there, so it just makes me sad that people are celebrating,” she said.

Despite her shaking hands and racing heart, when classes resume on campus Wednesday, Lao said she’ll be there.

“I really do want to get back to how it was before,” she said.

‘The most peaceful place on campus’

Erik Nystul, a UVU faculty member, returned to campus Monday, when faculty gathered for a virtual town hall to discuss how to support students moving forward.

As director of government internships for the university’s Herbert Institute of Public Policy, Nystul’s office overlooks the courtyard where Kirk was killed.

“When I arrived on campus, I wished that it was empty, that there was no signs that anything had ever happened there,” Nystul told CNN Tuesday. “But we can’t go back in time.”

As he works towards a master’s in public administration from UVU, Nystul also serves as an instructor to students, who he sometimes sees from his office window, resting, talking, napping in the sun. As a UVU alumni himself, he has his own memories in that courtyard.

“What I love about that courtyard is when all is normal, we have a fountain – I love it because you could be outside when the weather’s nice, and it kind of cancels out all the noise,” he said. “It becomes just the most peaceful place on campus.”

The university is working to restore that sense of peace. In addition to counseling and support services, a “Vigil for Unity” is scheduled for Friday.

“Together we will mourn. Together we will heal. And together we will move forward to restore a safe and supportive environment for every member of this campus and community,” UVU President Astrid S. Tuminez wrote in a letter to the campus community shared with CNN.

In Monday’s town hall, Tuminez stressed that faculty should be showing “exceptional care” to students in the wake of the shooting, Nystul said.

Faculty discussed options to ease the burden for students impacted by the shooting, including delaying or canceling assignments, adjusting curriculum, offering online learning options and more, he said.

When it comes to tightening security, the university may have to consider a backdrop of increasing political violence when hosting guest speakers in the future, Nystul noted.

“We’ve never had to check for snipers before,” he said.

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The science behind the lively colors of fall

Payton Counts

ST. JOSEPH, Mo (News-Press NOW) — Over the next couple of weeks, St. Joseph will once again be bursting with the colors of autumn. 

Certain weather conditions are needed to make the colors of fall, such as yellow, red and orange, appear. Cooler days, sunshine and moderate rainfall help prevent leaves from turning dry and brown. 

Fall foliage usually peaks in mid-October, but the recent dry spell and hotter days could keep leaves from reaching their full color potential, and may cause trees to drop them early. The ideal temperature for color change is around 70 degrees Fahrenheit.

Leaves changing colors during autumn are based on three different pigments that leaves contain. 

According to the Missouri Department of Conservation, chlorophyll gives leaves a basic green color and is a necessity for photosynthesis.

Timothy Wolfe, a forester at MDC, shared more about the process.

“Take milkweed, for example, you’re going to notice yellow and green leaves……this breakdown process of the chlorophyll essentially is allowing it to reveal the color change that you’re going to see in the fall,” he said.

Chlorophyll absorbs energy from sunlight to turn water and carbon dioxide into sugars and starches for trees. 

Carotenoids — which are always present in the leaf but are ‘hidden’ by the chlorophyll — provide yellows and oranges. They are the same pigments that turn carrots orange and daffodils yellow. 

The red and purple colors of fall are different; they form when sugars are produced during warm days and then trapped in leaves during cool nights. 

The trapped sugars change into anthocyanins, which appear as shades of red and purple. 

As northwest Missouri and northeast Kansas are currently in a D0 drought stage (abnormally dry), this could play a role in how leaves change in the weeks ahead.

Missouri Western State University professor of biology and plant science, Csengele Barta, states, “…it’s more likely that the change in the colors will be less gradual and it’s going to happen a little earlier.”

Meaning that the leaves could just turn brown and then fall to the ground.

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MSHP shares fall safety tips

TaMya Bracy

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — In the fall, typically, there are more accidents, according to auto accident data from Carfax.

There are various reasons why crashes in the fall are on the rise, including deer, harvest season, diminishing daylight and other factors.

Sgt. Shane Hux, the public information education officer for Missouri Highway Patrol Troop H shares tips on what to do about deer.

“The deer runs out in front of you,” Hux said. “It’s very important not to swerve to miss that deer, because what we see happen a lot of times is somebody has swerved to miss a deer traveling off the roadway, striking a fixed object or overturning, so it becomes a lot worse than actually just striking the deer again.”

Hux also said the northwest Missouri harvest is underway, so there will be more slow-moving vehicles on the road.

“You never know where they’re coming out of field entrances off of gravel road, secondary roadways, Hux said. “That’s why it’s always important to obey all the traffic laws, devote 100% of your attention to driving at all times,” he said.

Hux said it’s important to utilize your headlights and not leave them on automatic during daylight savings time.

“When you come to work and just prepare for that, make sure all of the lighting in your vehicle is properly working and make sure your vehicles are in good mechanical condition,” he said

Hux reminds both vehicle drivers and passengers to always wear their seatbelts.

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Salinas Police: Man dies after being struck by train near East Market Street

Victor Guzman

SALINAS, Calif. (KION-TV) — Salinas Police confirm a man is dead after being struck by a train in the area of East Market and Front Street on Tuesday.

Police said when they arrived on scene they found a 35-year-old man was still under the train after the collision.

Police said firefighters arrived on scene but the man was pronounced dead.

Union Pacific Police are handling the investigation.

The identity of the victim was not immediately released by officers.

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Aptos High cancels classes due to power outage at the school

Victor Guzman

APTOS, Calif. (KION-TV) — Staff at Aptos High School confirm to KION classes are canceled September 17 because of power outages at the school.

Staff at the school say they’re running on generators but the school has been without power for the last few days.

They say today they received word from the district to cancel classes.

PG&E says the outage is not due to an issue related to PG&E.

PG&E crews were there Saturday to find out the cause of the outage and discovered the school-owned equipment is what is leading to the outage.

They add the school is working with a contractor to get their equipment fixed. Once that’s done the power will be restored.

This is a developing story

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Police release video of July stabbing on Albuquerque bus

By Hamilton Kahn

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    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KOAT) — KOAT has received body cam video and surveillance video from the Albuquerque Police Department that appears to show Davis Gabaldon, a city bus driver, allegedly stabbing a man to death on July 9.

Police say it started early that morning when Raymond Coan begins arguing with Gabaldon, accusing him of being late. Soon after, Gabaldon stops and says, “We’re not going anywhere until he gets off the bus.”

A few minutes pass, then Coan addresses Gabaldon.

Coan: “What you’re saying to the rest of us in here, sit down and shut up. That’s not the best (expletive) thing to say.”

Gabaldon: “So what do you want me to say? Do you come in and talk (expletive) to me every day?”

Coan: “No.”

Gabaldon: “Then you come in here and you shut up, don’t you? You come in here and get quiet, don’t you?”

The two men start fighting, and Gabaldon again asks Coan to get off the bus. The fight continues, and police say that’s when Gabaldon allegedly stabs Coan.

Witnesses told police that before the fight, Coan took a knife of his own out of his backpack.

Gabaldon is pleading not guilty to first-degree murder, tampering with evidence, and criminal damage to property.

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Parents arrested for allegedly beating their infant daughter

By Corey Howard

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    ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (KOAT) — The parents, Jessica Bruseulas and Johnathan Castillo, are now behind bars in Albuquerque, facing multiple charges, including child abuse resulting in great bodily harm.

According to court documents, law enforcement is uncertain if the child will survive, as she was exposed to narcotics and beaten numerous times. Medical personnel informed investigators that the infant sustained multiple brain hemorrhages, a fractured skull, and bruising to her head.

They also said the child was in critical condition and not expected to survive the night.

“Just a horrific story of a young infant whose life has been marked by incredibly horrifying physical abuse,” John Day, KOAT legal expert and a former prosecutor, said.

Bruseulas told detectives that her boyfriend, Castillo, often used fentanyl and meth and became extremely violent while on drugs. She said Castillo would strike the infant with a closed fist for making noises, a pattern of abuse that began when the child was just two months old.

“Right now, at least the charges pending are looking at a range of sentencing from six years up to 18 years, depending on other charges,” a source said.

The court documents reveal that Bruseulas attempted to stop Castillo, but he would attack her. When investigators asked why she didn’t reach out to police, she said she was terrified.

“Was there nobody else in this child’s life that saw this going on and couldn’t step in to intervene?” Day questioned. “And you’ve got, in this case, both the mother and the father charged, the mother charged particularly with failing to report child abuse on the theory that she let this occur and didn’t do anything to stop it.”

The initial court appearance for Bruseulas and Castillo has not been set yet.

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City of Yuma Communication Team earns national recognition

Marcos Icahuate

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – The City of Yuma’s Communication Team have earned several awards at the City-County Communications and Marketing Association (3CMA) Awards Ceremony.

The ceremony, held at Las Vegas, Nevada, had over 1,100 entries from government communication departments across the U.S.

The City of Yuma Communications Team earned the Savvy Award in Video for Charlemos Yuma, a Spanish-language outreach initiative. Judges at the ceremony said Charlemos Yuma was entertaining and inclusive, while balancing education with humor.

The other award was in the Digital Interactive category for City News Yuma Minute, a local news radio segment, which was called a “smart strategy and great outcome.”

“These awards highlight the City’s commitment to connecting with all residents in meaningful and accessible ways,” said Communications Manager Jen Miller. “I am proud of our team for always bringing creativity and a community first mindset to everything we do.”

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Calexico business red-tagged after drugs were found

Karina Bazarte

CALEXICO, Calif. (KYMA) – A local business has been red-tagged and temporarily closed after law enforcement found drugs and multiple violations.

The Calexico Police Department (CPD) says VIP Adult Book Store and Arcade on Imperial Avenue and Fifth Street was red-tagged last week.

Officers say they received numerous complaints of drug use at the business — especially in the parking lot.

That’s when CPD, along with the Calexico Code Enforcement Division, conducted an inspection at the location.

“The Calexico Fire Department inspector also joined us for this business inspection. While we were doing the inspection, we located several subjects hanging out upstairs. We also located several methamphetamine pipes upstairs, and we located approximately 4.5 grams of methamphetamine that was packaged for sale,” said Jose Cuellar, CPD Detective.

The inspector also found construction violations that make the building unsafe.

Calexico police say no one has been arrested at this time.

Police say this case is still under investigation, and the store remains closed until code enforcement determines it is safe to reopen.

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Father of Yuma road rage victim searching for answers

Madeline Murray

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – The suspect accused of killing his own brother was back in court Tuesday.

Their father shares his reaction with us for the first time. 

19-year-old Juan Figueroa is accused of running over his 17-year old brother, Javier Figueroa.

This happened after police say they got into a road rage fight with another person on Saturday night right by the Starbucks parking lot on Fourth Avenue and 15th Street.

During court, the judge denied to lower the bond amount, keeping it at $500,000.

We spoke with the father of the two brothers, Joseph Figueroa, who describes the devastation their family is going through.

“We’re just heartbroken, I mean my son, well he’s gone. I didn’t get to see him, my other one’s detained, I can’t see him. Right now, we all just need to be together as a family,” said Figueroa.

You can donate to the Figueroa family’s GoFundMe here.

 

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