ABC-7 at 4: 1-10 Widening West Project Update

Nichole Gomez

TX Dot’s Jennifer Wright joins us with an update on the I-10 widening West Project which has been underway in northwest El Paso for just over three years now.

Traffic Alerts: Courtesy (TX Dot El Paso)

I-10 Widening West

Monday, September 8 through Saturday, September 13

9 a.m. to 4 p.m. 9 (as needed)

•       North- and South Desert between Vinton and Thorn alternate lane closures

Crews will be working on electrical and miscellaneous construction work.

I-10 Widening West 2

Monday, September 8 through Saturday, September 13

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

I-10 east- and westbound between Anthony and Nashua alternate lane closures

North and South Desert between Anthony and Nashua alternate lane closures

Crews will be conducting dirt work and removing miscellaneous materials.

Monday, September 8 through Saturday, September 13

9 p.m. to 6 a.m. (Nightly)

I-10 east- and westbound between Anthony and Nashua left lane closed

Crews will be conducting concrete placement for new pavement surface.

Artcraft

Monday, September 9 through Friday, September 12

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Artcraft east- and westbound between New Mexico State Line and Doniphan alternate lane closures

Crews will be performing illumination install and delivering construction material.

South Desert between Clarkstone and Blue Sky alternate lane closures

North Desert between Helen of Troy and Northern Pass alternate lane closures

Crews will be loading and unloading material and equipment.

Monday, October 13 ADVANCE WARNING

Continuous Closure Until further notice 24/7

I-10 eastbound on-ramp between Transmountain and Artcraft

Crews will be working on drill shaft foundation and column installation.

Transmountain Rehab

Monday, September 8 through Friday, September 12

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Loop 375 (Transmountain) east- and westbound between Tom Mays and Main Gap left lane closed

Crews will be working on punch list items.

Borderland Expressway Phase 2

Monday, September 8

7 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Continuous Closure 24/7)

US-54 east- and westbound between Mesquite Hills and McCombs alternate lane closures

Crews will be paving detours.

Tuesday, September 9 through Friday, September 12

7 a.m. to 5 p.m.

US-54 east- and westbound between Mesquite Hills and McCombs left lane closure

Crews will be working on paving detours.

Monday, September 8 through Friday, September 12

7 a.m. to 5 p.m.

McCombs north- and southbound between US-54 and Stan Roberts alternate lane closures

Stan Roberts east- and westbound between McCombs and Martin Luther King alternate lane closures

Martin Luther King northbound between Stan Roberts and New Mexico State line right lane closure

Crews will be placing portable concrete traffic barrier.

Mesa Safety Lighting

Monday, September 8 through Saturday, September 13

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Mesa west- and eastbound between Champion and Fountain left lane closed

Mesa west- and eastbound between North Desert and Remcon right lane closed

Mesa west- and eastbound between Champion and Alto Mesa right lane closed

Crews will be working on lighting improvements.

Spall Repair

Sunday, September 7 through Thursday, September 11

9 p.m. to 6 a.m.

I-10 westbound between Paisano and Porfirio Diaz alternate lane closure

Crews will be repairing spall.

Guardrail Repair

Monday, September 8

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

I-10 eastbound between Schuster to Santa Fe right and left lane closure at Santa Fe exit

Tuesday, September 9

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Loop 375 (Transmountain) eastbound between Mile Marker 19 and last Picnic Tables right lane closed

Wednesday, September 10

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Loop 375 (Transmountain) eastbound between Picnic Tables and Border Patrol Museum right lane closed

Thursday, September 11

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

US-54 southbound between Ellerthorpe and Pershing exit right lane closed

Friday, September 12

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

US-54 (CD Lanes) southbound between Altura and Montana shoulder closed

Crews will be working on guardrail.

Miscellaneous Concrete

Monday, September 8 through Friday, September 12

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

I-10 westbound between Mesa and Porfirio Diaz right lane closed

Yandell eastbound between Mesa and Santa Fe center lane closed

Crews will be repairing rip rap.

Maintenance

Sunday, September 7

3 a.m. to 4 p.m.

I-10 West between Airway and Geronimo three right lane closed

Airway entrance ramp to I-10 West closed

Crews will be working on bridge joints.

Monday, September 8 through Friday, September 12

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

I-10 East between Kansas and Missouri right lane closed

Crews will be working on drains.

US-62 (Paisano) east- and westbound between Eucalyptus and Coles right lane closed

Crews will be cleaning.

Right lane closed at US-85 (Paisano) southbound at Executive intersection

Crews will be working on the drain.

Loop 375 Widening Project

Continuous closure beginning at 5 a.m. Saturday, September 6 to 5 a.m. Monday, September 8 (48 hour)

Loop 375 northbound main lane closure Padres Exit Ramp to Pan American Entrance Ramp.

Loop 375 southbound main lane closure Pan American Exit Ramp to Zaragoza Exit ramp (Port of Entry).

Crews working on concrete barrier removal, re-striping, and painting

Monday September 8, to Friday September 12

Daily, 9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m.

Americas Avenue (frontage road) alternating lane closures at UPRR south to north turn-around

Crews working on installing sidewalk.

Tuesday 9, to Thursday September 11

Nightly, 9:00 p.m. until 5:00 a.m.

LP375 southbound main lane closure between North Loop Exit Ramp and Pan American Entrance Ramp

Crews working on striping and concrete barrier removal.

Horizon/Darrington Reconstruction Project

Tuesday, September 9 to Thursday, September 11

Nightly, 9 p.m. to 4 a.m.

Walmart Exit/Entrance complete closure at Darrington Road and Pawling Drive

Crews will be working on utilities.

I-10 Landscape & Aesthetic Project

Monday, September 8 to Friday, September 12

Daily, 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

Gateway West Boulevard at Lee Trevino Drive left turnaround lane closure and alternating lane closures

Gateway West Boulevard at Zaragoza Road left turnaround lane closure

Gateway East Boulevard at Zaragoza Road left turnaround lane closure

I-10 west- and eastbound right lane closure at Lee Trevino Drive

Crews will be placing concrete riprap, welding steel panels, painting concrete riprap and placing light fixtures.

Preventive Maintenance Project

Monday, September 8 to Friday, September 12

Daily, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

US67 north- and southbound alternating lane closures between US67/US90 JCT and Pecos/Brewster County Line

Crews will be performing mobile operations, multiple and alternating lane closures on replacing roadway pavement markings.

Sunday, September 7 to Thursday, September 11

Nightly, 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. 

US 54 north- and southbound alternating lane closures between Hondo Pass Drive and Texas/New Mexico State Line

I-10 frontage roads west- and eastbound alternating lane closures between I-10 JCT (West and I-10 JCT (East)

Spur 601 west- and eastbound alternating lane closures between US 54 and Loop 375 

Loop 375 west- and eastbound alternating lane closures between Zaragoza Point of Entry and US 85/IH 10 JCT

FM 2316 (McRae Boulevard) alternating lane closures between US 62/180 and I-10 

Crews will be performing mobile operations, multiple and alternating lane closures on replacing roadway pavement markings.

Safety Lighting Project

Monday, September 8 to Friday, September 12

Daily, 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. 

I-10 westbound left shoulder closure between Darrington Road and Horizon Boulevard

Frontage Road between Gateway Boulevard East and Gateway Boulevard West complete closure

Crews will be working on the shoulder in the median installing conduit and drill shafts for illumination and installing lighting fixtures.

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Bend Economic Development Advisory Board meeting today

KTVZ – News Team

The Bend Economic Development Advisory Board (BEDAB) will conduct a hybrid meeting through Zoom and in person in the Council Chambers at City Hall, 710 NW Wall Street, Bend, OR 97703 on Monday, September 8, 2025, from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m.

Today’s agenda will include a discussion on the Electrification Policy Options and Joint Committee Process as well as a Neighborhood Commercial Presentation. Invest Bend will also show a presentation.

To attend via Zoom, Preregister

To Attend by Phone:

Call-in Phone Number: 1-888-788-0099

Webinar ID: 818 8514 3006

Passcode: 914089

YouTube Link:  Livestream the September BEDAB meeting

Technical Difficulties Connecting to this Meeting: Call 541-410-9341.

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Welcoming Week kicks off this week, special performances planned

Kelsey Merison

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Art Sprouts, Inc., in partnership with the City of Bend, is gearing up for ‘Threads of Belonging: Brothers Ivan’ happening Sunday, September 14th.

It’s the first of three Welcoming Week events designed to celebrate culture, community, and belonging through art and story, which begins Friday.

Welcoming Week is a global movement that brings neighbors together across lines of difference to build community and affirm the belief that we all belong.

The Threads of Belonging event is free and will feature the Ukrainian folk duo, Brothers Ivan, whose music blends soulful harmonies, ancestral rhythms, and contemporary resonance.

Art Sprouts Inc. said the afternoon will open with a land acknowledgment and a traditional Ukrainian bread and salt ceremony, which is a gesture of gratitude and hospitality shared across generations.

Guests will also be invited to enjoy comforting Ukrainian food.

Everyone is welcome to attend.

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Two local school districts to test their emergency alert system

Dillon Fuhrman

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – Yuma School District One and Yuma Union High School District (YUHSD) are conducting a test of their emergency alert system through ParentSquare Monday.

According to a press release, the test, taking place from 4:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., is “an opportunity for school and district administrators to receive valuable training using this feature,” and “will also be an opportunity for families to ensure their contact information is updated.”

During the test, the press release says, “Staff and parents/guardians will receive multiple messages delivered several ways (text, email, and voice message) from all District One and YUHSD schools they are connected to.”

To learn more about the test, read the press release below.

TEST of Emergency SystemDownload

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Officials warn of high fire risk in Central Oregon despite recent rainfall

KTVZ – News Team

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Fire risk remains high in Central Oregon despite recent rainfall. According to Central Oregon Fire Info, recent weather systems across the area brought abundant lightning, strong winds, and some much-needed rain.

But fuels such as grass, brush, and timber remain extremely dry, keeping wildfire risk high.

So far this month, wildland fire resources have responded to 76 incidents, including 46 wildfires, most caused by lightning.

Below is a portion of a press release from Central Oregon Fire Info pertaining to fire restrictions in place:

“As a reminder, Stage 1 Public Use Fire Restrictions remain in effect on Central Oregon public lands. These rules prohibit open fires, including wood stoves and charcoal briquettes—except in designated, developed campgrounds. The use of internal combustion engines, including chainsaws, is also prohibited between 1 p.m. and 8 p.m. For details and a list of designated campgrounds, visit centraloregonfire.org/fire-restrictions.

The Oregon Department of Forestry’s Central Oregon Forest Protection District is also under Regulated Closure, which applies to private, state, and county forestlands it protects. These restrictions limit fires, smoking, and equipment use. For the latest information, visit ODF’s website or contact a local office.

Firefighters continue to respond quickly to new starts, but with peak fire season still underway, any spark can rapidly grow and threaten communities, firefighters, and natural resources.

The public plays a vital role in prevention: follow fire restrictions, never leave a campfire unattended, and call 9-1-1 immediately if you see smoke.

Visit the official source for wildfire information in Central Oregon at centraloregonfire.org for wildfire updates or follow fire information on X/Twitter @CentralORfire. Call 9-1-1 to report a wildfire. For smoke and air quality information visit fire.airnow.gov.”

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Construction starting on new Corby Grove pickleball courts, set to open next month

TaMya Bracy

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The City of St. Joseph Parks, Recreation and Civic Facilities said progress is being made at the Corby’s Grove pickleball courts.

This project was approved by city council members on Monday, Aug. 4.

The location will feature eight fenced-in courts with lighting for evening play, shaded seating, a new walkway connecting the complex to the current sidewalk. It will also feature more ADA accessible sidewalks and courts, as well as a drinking fountain.

This project is funded by the half-cent parks tax and CIP tax.

The courts were originally expected to be completed by the spring of 2026, but the Director of the City’s Parks and Recreation department said the completion date may be sooner.

Director Jeff Adkins said construction crews will start pouring concrete on Tuesday.

“They’ll be pouring down, I don’t know for sure how many yards of concrete, but it’ll be big enough for eight pickleball courts,” Adkins said. “Once it sets for, I think, six to seven days, they’ll come in and it’s actually going to be a post-tension, concrete surface.”

Adkins shared that, with quick work, the courts have the potential to be done next month.

“The contractor was able to get here sooner than they had originally anticipated,” he said.  “We’ve had great weather so far. So right now we’re looking at having them done and ready to play late this fall,” he said.

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City of St. Joseph hit by cyberattack, data potentially acquired in breach

Cameron Montemayor

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Multiple sources and documents obtained via public records requests indicate the city suffered a significant cyberattack in early June, an incident that crippled network services for an extended period of time and potentially exposed the personal data of thousands of residents, city officials confirmed Monday.

The City of St. Joseph has been forced to spend more than $1 million on extensive upgrades to its cybersecurity and technology infrastructure since it first acknowledged via Facebook on Monday, June 9, that some of its services were down or temporarily unavailable due to “network issues,” saying later on June 26 it was investigating network security issues and no threat was posed to the public.

The city is now shedding additional light on the extent of the incident, saying in a press release Monday that while no evidence suggests any information has been misused, it is possible that some data, including records from the St. Joseph police and health departments, could have been acquired by an unauthorized third party.

“The investigation into this incident determined that certain files may have been acquired without authorization. After extensive electronic discovery, which concluded on Sept. 4, it was determined that some personal information may have been present in the impacted data set,” the city said. “In the next 14 days, some residents will begin receiving letters regarding an incident that may have exposed personal information.”

Letters will be sent to approximately 11,000 people and will include resources that can be used to protect information and instructions for enrolling in complimentary credit monitoring and identity theft protection services, free of charge.

“These services will alert those who enroll when changes occur to their credit file. Impacted residents also will receive proactive assistance to help with any questions they might have or in the event of becoming a victim of fraud,” the city said. “The City of St. Joseph is fully committed to the protection of citizen and employee information, system security and data privacy, particularly in a time when cybersecurity incidents have become all too common.”

Multiple current and former city employees, including one who agreed to speak on the condition of anonymity, confirmed to News-Press NOW that the incident was the result of a data breach that brought many technology and communication services to a near standstill for days.

“The first thing I noticed when I came in that Monday was our phones didn’t work. And then it was we couldn’t get into anything. Absolutely nothing,” a prominent former staffer at City Hall said. “I just kept saying, ‘What is this? What’s the problem? What’s going on?’ Then they say we were hacked.”

The cyberattack, described to her as a data breach by the city’s IT staff on multiple occasions, was significant enough that it prevented her and staff from accessing network programs, files and records critical for daily business, including the city’s email server.

The staffer, who worked in a large department that handled customer payments and coordinated heavily with businesses, described a chaotic environment as major processes were essentially shut down, with overwhelmed staffers struggling to complete routine tasks for much of the week, which typically included coordination with public safety departments.

“We couldn’t get into any files, Fire (Department), too. I worked closely with the fire inspectors, all that stuff, how were we supposed to operate?” she said. “It was mass chaos. There should have been some type of public announcement that, ‘We are struggling here.’”

The city said it first detected the network issue around 2:30 a.m. on June 9 and quickly relayed it to the information technology team at 4 p.m. The city’s network was immediately shut down at all locations as a precaution and the IT team started conducting its inquiry by 6 a.m.

“Upon detecting this incident, the city moved quickly to initiate a response, which included conducting an investigation with the assistance of outside IT specialists and confirming the security of the network environment. Law enforcement was notified. The city wiped and rebuilt affected systems and has taken steps to bolster its network security. continuing work that already was underway at the time of this disruption,” the city press release read.

While unconfirmed by department officials, the incident reportedly had a notable impact on file access and communications for the police and fire departments. Despite that, city said dispatching of police, fire and emergency medical services continued uninterrupted despite the incident thanks to longstanding protocols and contingency planning.

Enacted in 2009, Missouri’s data breach notification law requires entities that own or license personal information of Missouri residents to provide notice to affected consumers if there has been a breach of security following discovery or notification of the breach. Notice must be made without unreasonable delay after discovery of the breach. 

Notification is not required if, after “appropriate investigation or consultation with relevant government agencies, the entity determines there is no reasonable likelihood of identity theft or fraud.”

The former city staffer was told by a colleague in the city’s IT department and a direct witness that ransomware was involved in the cyberattack.

“He sent me a picture of every time he tried to open up a file of the ransom, this ransom note. I know that it was some type of ransom hack,” she said.

Multiple Sunshine Law requests for a list of insurance claims, data breach documents and emails over a three-month period on the matter initially resulted in a small handful of communications being provided to News-Press NOW, citing privileged and protected correspondence.

“Disclosure of any additional email correspondence would impair the City’s ability to protect the security or safety of persons or real property, and that the public interest in nondisclosure outweighs the public interest in disclosure of additional email correspondence,” a city spokesperson said in an email to News-Press NOW in August.  

One email obtained in the request shows a personal Gmail account — with the name of a prominent city human resources official — was used June 9 to communicate with insurance company CBIZ Insurance Services about the city’s cybersecurity policy coverage, as well as a risk assessment for its network on the same day the data breach occurred.

Use of personal emails for government business is typically discouraged, unless necessary in cases of emergency. The email suggests that the city’s email server was inaccessible for staff across multiple departments.

It’s unclear exactly how many departments were impacted by the incident, if data or personal information was collected and if so, to what extent.

The aforementioned cybersecurity policy shows the city had a cybersecurity risk assessment performed on its network defenses in December 2024, assessing the potential for direct exposures for ransomware, malware and other dangerous misconfigurations.

No infections or exposures were ultimately found at the time, including deep scans for initial access of malware, ransomware and detecting if any credentials had been offered for sale.

The city also added several endorsements to its policy at that time to expand its initial cybersecurity coverage. The risk assessment was carried out by Tokio Marine HCC, a cybersecurity insurance company.

City spends more than $1 million to improve infrastructure following incident

City councilmembers have authorized a number of costly investments to improve its cybersecurity, technology and software following the incident, in some cases to improve aging and outdated platforms.

“The City has many platforms that are aging and now require upgrades to ensure they remain reliable, efficient, and aligned with current standards,” a document explaining one ordinance for technology purchases reads.

On Aug. 4, councilmembers approved an ordinance to provide funding in an amount not to exceed $997,659 for investments in the city’s technology services to address infrastructure modernization. Investments included new servers, firewalls, networking equipment, data storage solutions and improved backup processes.

Funds were allocated from the General Fund/Computer Network according to the ordinance.

The ordinance also granted City Manager Mike Schumacher the ability to expedite purchase orders and agreements associated with said expenditures, including those that would typically require separate Council approval under the City’s bidding thresholds.

On Aug. 18, councilmembers approved a $63,089 proposal to purchase three years of security licensing to consolidate the city’s cybersecurity infrastructure. The license included threat protection, secure firewall and email, endpoint security, DNS-layer defense and multifactor authentication.

“The City of St. Joseph does carry cybersecurity insurance, and services it provides were utilized during this network disruption. At the next City Council meeting on Monday, Sept. 29, an ordinance to authorize a $50,000 insurance deductible payment will have a first reading,” the city press release said.

Disruptions linger following breach

The staffer said after the first day passed on June 9 with little to no clarity on the situation, a hotspot device was brought in the following day, providing enough service for just one employee while the rest of the department struggled to complete tasks, often working off memory or from older records, with new information and data being inaccessible.

“I was going around the world to make something work, reinventing the wheel,” she said. “I was there way more than I should, working late hours trying to keep the city afloat, trying to keep business going.”

She said the city was unable to provide additional hotspots as multiple employees — including herself– resorted to using personal cellphones and laptops to view or conduct official city business, something she was later instructed not to do after several days.

With a lack of clarity about possible risks or exposures from the incident, she was highly uncomfortable with the department continuing transactions with customer credit cards.

“If we were hacked and they were using a hotspot and still having customers come in and pay for things with credit cards. If they still had access to all of our files, how is that safe?” she said. “I would not do anything unless it was cash payment.”

The city’s press release noted that certain departments were able to continue conducting business, including accepting and making payments, by developing workarounds within hours of the network disruption. 

“City staff focused immediately on keeping essential services running.”

Despite some emails starting to trickle in by the end of the initial week, work was largely impossible as a majority of processes for her department weren’t available again until several weeks later.

Months later, and some processes remain interrupted, including daily dissemination of arrests, thefts and vandalism reports to media outlets from the St. Joseph Police Department, information of high public interest.

The last official reports to News-Press NOW were sent on June 8, a day before the network incident occurred.

Despite being passionate and well compensated for her job, she quit not long after due to the incident and previous challenges that brought considerable stress.

“I loved my work. I loved what I did,” she said, “It’s sad that I have to go, because there’s no way I could take much more.”

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Redistricting committee meets Thursday

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Alison Patton

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

The first meeting of Gov. Mike Kehoe’s special session starts Thursday at noon with the special redistricting committee.

This committee will hear testimonies from the public on House Bill 1, and then go into executive session right after to discuss the proposed legislation, committee chair Richard West (R-Wentzville) said Wednesday.

The meeting will proceed despite the NAACP’s attempts to stop the session with a temporary restraining order, according to previous ABC 17 reporting. The organization argues it’s illegal to redistrict outside of the 10-year census.

Republicans claim the Missouri First Map splits fewer counties, but Democrats argue the new map would dilute Democratic votes.

The Missouri First Map would expand the Fifth District, which is primarily Kansas City’s district, to also include portions of Boone County north and west of Columbia.

House Minority Leader Ashley Aune (D-Kansas City) filed her own proposed map on Thursday. That proposal keeps the Fifth Congressional District within the Kansas City area. Audrain, Boone, Cole and Miller counties would mark the westernmost counties of the Third Congressional District, stretching west to St. Charles County.

Rep. Aune map, HB2Download

The National Democratic Redistricting Committee met Thursday morning to breakdown the intentions of the map.

“Despite overwhelming opposition from the people, Missouri Republicans are proposing a congressional map that would split apart the state’s most populous city and turn the Show-Me state into one of the most egregiously gerrymandered states in the country,” said John Bisognano, president of the NDRC.

The election committee will discuss initiative petition reform Thursday at 1 p.m. to take up House Joint Resolution 3.

Several proposed legislations have been submitted regarding initiative petition reform.

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Convicted murderer denied geriatric compassion release

By Margaret Kavanagh , Bryant Maddrick

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    VIRGINIA BEACH, Virginia (WTKR) — The Virginia Parole Board denied parole for convicted murderer James King and will not consider him for eligibility again for another three years, the board confirmed with WTKR News 3 Friday morning.

The board’s decision follows efforts from the murder victim’s sister to prevent King — and other repeat violent criminals in the state — from being eligible for parole under a Virginia law regarding age.

King is currently serving two life sentences for assaulting and murdering Lexie Walters back in 2020 at a Virginia Beach Days Inn. It’s not his first murder conviction: He previously served 20 years in jail for violently murdering a woman in Ohio back in 1986.

Although King was recently sentenced for the Virginia Beach murder back in February, he was being considered for the possibility of parole due to his age.

Under Virginia law, an inmate must be at least 65 years old with 5 years served, or 60 with 10 years served, to be considered annually for “geriatric conditional release.” The current law excludes people convicted of Class 1 felonies, but King was found guilty of Class 2 felonies.

King was denied geriatric conditional release and his case was deferred for three years, which the board says is the maximum amount of time.

On Friday morning, the parole board called Lexie’s sister, Marie Jones, to let her know his parole was denied.

“I was overwhelmed with joy. That’s all I could think of was ‘thank you, Lord,'” said Jones.

Jones is now fighting to change Virginia law with legislation called “Lexie’s Law.” It would make it tougher for repeat criminals to be considered for release and do away with geriatric parole, among other changes.

Jones said a draft of Lexie’s Law should be ready for lawmakers to look at as early as Sept. 10.

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Man believed to have filmed thousands of males in bathrooms: Police

By Colter Anstaett , Noah Kim, Maddie Miller

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    WILLIAMSBURG, Virginia (WTKR) — A Gloucester County man is accused of unlawful filming in public restrooms in Colonial Williamsburg, the city’s police department said Monday. Officers are now looking into the extent of his alleged crimes, as they believe he’s unlawfully filmed “thousands of males” and shared the pictures and videos with others online.

George Thomas West, 76, was arrested and charged with 17 counts of unlawful filming of another person and one count of disorderly conduct, according to police.

A citizen told authorities on Aug. 2 they saw West filming people in a public restroom located on the corner of South Henry Street and Duke of Gloucester Street, police say. When officers arrived, a witness alleged they’d seen West filming people in a bathroom before on two separate occasions, according to a criminal complaint obtained by WTKR News 3.

While speaking with West, an officer noticed West had a phone and was deleting photos from it, the complaint states. The witness got upset about West’s alleged attempt to get rid of evidence, the complaint states, and snatched the phone from him.

An officer then took the phone, the complaint goes onto say. With West’s consent, the complaint states, the officer looked at the phone’s camera roll and found two photos showing “mens’ penises from inside the bathroom,” as well as 15 more in the trash folder.

Multiple victims from the August report are still unidentified, police added.

Officers then obtained warrants to search West’s phone and car.

Police say they believe West has unlawfully filmed “thousands of males in public restrooms” — specifically, in the Colonial Williamsburg area. Police further believe he did most of his filming in the Williamsburg area on Saturdays.

West is accused of uploading the pictures and videos he took online to share with others, News 3’s Colter Anstaett confirmed with Nicole Trifone, the city of Williamsburg’s Communications Director.

The unlawful filming allegations against West date back to 1996, police determined after uncovering evidence.

Police say they are trying to identify more victims and will seek additional charges as appropriate.

If you believe you may have been unlawfully filmed in a men’s bathroom in Williamsburg, police encourage you to contact them. You can send an email with “West 825” in the subject line to srobertsjr@williamsburgva.gov to provide information that can help police with their case.

Tips can also be submitted anonymously through Peninsula Crime Stoppers by phone at 1-888-LOCK-U-UP.

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