Driver sentenced to 10 years for 2023 DUI crash that killed teen passenger

Seth Ratliff

BLACKFOOT, Idaho (KIFI) — Marco Dimitri Cuevas was sentenced to 10 years in state prison yesterday after pleading guilty to Felony Vehicular Manslaughter in a 2023 crash that killed his teenage passenger.

The fatal incident took place over two years ago, on the night of October 14, 2023, near Snake River High School. According to initial police reports, Cuevas was driving a GMC pickup truck while under the influence. He reportedly ran a stop sign and collided with another truck. Both Cuevas and his 17-year-old passenger, later identified as Jesus Ortiz, were ejected from the vehicle. Ortiz died from his injuries at a local hospital, while Cuevas and the driver of the other truck were both injured.

RELATED: Arrest made after accident that killed 17-year-old

The teen’s online obituary says he was the youngest of four siblings and a “bubbly person” who loved his family.

The case, prosecuted by Bingham County Prosecuting Attorney Ryan Jolley, progressed slowly due to an evaluation of Cuevas’s competency to stand trial. Jolley confirmed that Cuevas remained in custody during this process. Once his competency was established, the case moved forward, and Cuevas chose to plead guilty.

Under the terms of the sentence, Cuevas must serve a minimum of 7 years before being eligible for parole. The remaining 3 years of the sentence are “indeterminate,” meaning they are dependent on his behavior while incarcerated.

“My thoughts and prayers go out to the victim’s mother and family, who were so deeply affected by this tragedy,” Jolley said following the sentencing.

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Ways to Spice Up Your Home This Fall Season with Westerlay Orchids

Andie Lopez Bornet

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – This Fall season is the perfect time to spice up your home with orchids and pumpkins.

Westerlay Orchids joins your Morning News to talk about upcoming workshops and ways to decorate your home for Fall using both pumpkins and orchids to create beautiful arrangements.

Indoor Plant Pro and retail showroom manager Virginia says there are still tickets available and walk-ins are welcome.

The expert-led Fall Inspired Orchid Arrangement Workshop and Guided Greenhouse Tour is on Saturday, October 18th from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. at Westerlay Orchids Showroom. To get tickets you can call their phone number at 805-684-5411 to reserve a spot.

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Part 1: “Corporal Q”: The Idaho prison guard who preyed on women — and the system that hid his ‘predatory’ conduct

InvestigateWest

Editor’s note: The article discusses sexual assault. “Guarded by Predators” is a new investigative series obtained through partnership with InvestigateWest, exposing rape and abuse by Idaho’s prison guards and the system that shields them. Find the entire series at investigatewest.org/guarded-by-predators.

Originally Published: OCT. 12, 2025

By Wilson Criscione and Whitney Bryen

BOISE, Idaho — In January 2018, a woman imprisoned at South Idaho Correctional Institution outside Boise was taken to a medical clinic to get abnormal cervical tissue removed. A guard named Ricardo Quiroz — known among inmates as “Corporal Q” — was her only escort, and he let her sit up front in a white van.

Afterward, still in pain and bleeding from the procedure, she and Quiroz walked back to the van. This time, she tells InvestigateWest, Quiroz told her to go all the way to the back. She complied. He followed her, telling her to take off her pants, says the woman, who asked to be referred to by her middle name, Lynn.

“There’s certain times where you fight, and there’s certain times that you don’t, and when you’re an inmate …,” Lynn trails off.

He raped her, Lynn says. Then he went back up to the driver’s seat and drove her back to prison.

Two years later, after Lynn got out of prison and away from Quiroz, she reported what happened. Investigators then discovered that just weeks before Quiroz drove Lynn to her medical procedure, he used his access to prison records to locate and contact a second woman who had recently been released from prison for a sexual encounter, police reports show.

Ada County prosecutors declined to press charges for the second woman. But based on Lynn’s report, they did charge Quiroz, now 34, with one count of sexual contact with a prisoner. He was convicted in 2021 of the felony, considered rape under Idaho law. He had to register as a sex offender and spend nine months in the custody of the Idaho Department of Correction.

The Ada County Sheriff’s Office made heavy redactions to a report containing allegations that former South Idaho Correctional Institution prison guard Ricardo Quiroz (inset) assaulted an inmate. Quiroz was later charged and convicted in 2021 of sexual contact with a prisoner.

Though such charges against an officer typically become major local news stories, Quiroz’s case received zero coverage — until now. Neither the Idaho Department of Correction nor the Ada County Sheriff’s Office, which investigated Quiroz, notified the public that a prison guard had been arrested for preying on a woman in his custody. To this day, four years since his conviction, both agencies have declined to release basic information about the crime that Quiroz pleaded guilty to. 

InvestigateWest learned of the case after requesting from the Idaho court system all cases involving the charge of sexual contact with a prisoner since 2015. Reporters relied on a heavily redacted police report, audio of court hearings, and interviews with the victim and others aware of the case to produce this story, which reveals how the Idaho Department of Correction failed to prevent a guard from abusing vulnerable women he was tasked with keeping safe and then hid details from the public. The department declined to discuss the case with reporters for this story.

The case against Quiroz stands out as the only time in the last 10 years that an Idaho women’s prison guard has received a prison sentence for sexually assaulting an inmate. Most sexual abuse allegations, according to public reports compiled by the state prison system, are never referred to law enforcement by the Idaho Department of Correction — a likely violation of a federal law meant to stop prison sexual abuse. The cases that Idaho law enforcement does investigate rarely result in criminal charges, sometimes despite evidence that a guard had sexual contact with a prisoner, a felony whether or not the inmate is a willing participant in the moment. Even fewer guards are convicted of the crime if they are charged. 

Although Quiroz is the rare exception, Lynn doesn’t see the case as a victory for sexual assault survivors. Instead, she calls it an “infuriating” example of why sexual abuse by guards is so common. 

Ada County prosecutor Katelyn Farley, pictured here at an April 2022 trial for another case, prosecuted former South Idaho Correctional Institution guard Ricardo Quiroz for a felony charge of sexual contact with a prisoner. Farley told an Ada County judge at Quiroz’s sentencing that Quiroz “used his position, his authority, and the power he had as a correctional officer to make these women sexual conquests.” (Brian Myrick/The Idaho Press-Tribune via AP)

‘Its Me’

By 2018, Quiroz had built a reputation in his five years at South Idaho Correctional Institution, a 700-bed men’s and women’s prison. His supervisors described how Quiroz would “make a game of these sexual conquests with not only the inmates, but with other staff,” according to a statement made by Ada County prosecutor Katelyn Farley during his 2021 sentencing hearing. Farley declined an interview for this story. Quiroz did not return several messages seeking comment. 

“He was making these decisions long before January of 2018. The sentencing material showed that he was engaged in inappropriate sexual relations since 2013. He was aware of these behaviors because it led to his divorce with his first wife,” Farley said in the hearing. The sentencing material she was referring to is not available for the public to obtain.

The investigation of Quiroz focused on two alleged victims, one of them being Lynn. In police reports, the second alleged victim, whom InvestigateWest is not naming, described how when she was incarcerated at the prison’s prerelease center in late 2017, she would talk to “Q” — she didn’t know his real name — frequently about football. Eventually, he began flirting with her and rumors began to circulate within the prison, leading to internal investigations that hit dead ends, she said, because at that point, they hadn’t done anything physical. But she “enjoyed being treated like someone other than an inmate” and thought Q was attractive. 

One day, she went into a janitor’s closet for cleaning supplies and he followed her in. Cameras could not see them. She told police that he tried to kiss her, but she turned her face away before rushing out when they heard voices.

A Department of Correction investigator interviewed her about the incident, but she “wasn’t honest with investigators” at the time, the police report says, “fearing her prison term would be extended for her involvement.” Q told her to look him up when she was released from prison. 

Weeks later, in January 2018, she was out on probation and was living in a halfway house in Boise. She got an email that said “Its Me” as the subject — it was Q. Quiroz told her he looked her information up in internal department records, which the general public does not have access to, according to her account in a police report. 

The Idaho Correctional Center south of Boise, Idaho. (AP Photo/Charlie Litchfield)

The two emailed back and forth, and they met up in his truck outside of her house. He was still in his uniform. The two began kissing, and Q put his hand on the back of her head, forcefully pushing it down toward his lap, according to the police report. 

It is not clear exactly what happened after that. The Ada County Sheriff’s Office redacted from the police report all descriptions of sexual contact that Quiroz allegedly had with any women, despite “sexual contact with a prisoner” being the crime for which he was convicted. 

In an email exchange included within the investigative file, the woman called Quiroz a “good kisser” and Quiroz replied to say she is too, “as well as everything (else) you did for me.” 

The two stopped talking on Jan. 8, 2018, when she found out Quiroz had a girlfriend, the emails show. InvestigateWest was unable to reach the woman for comment. 

Lynn, meanwhile, told InvestigateWest that Quiroz had been chatty with her during her time in the prison for drug possession. She’d heard rumors of “Q” having relationships with inmates, but she didn’t know if they were true. She thought he was a nice guy, and she trusted him to keep her safe during her medical appointment on Jan. 22, 2018. 

Brenda Smith, director of the Project on Addressing Prison Rape at American University in Washington, D.C., said despite the safety risk, prison transports are often conducted by a single guard and provide an easy opportunity for sexual assault.

“It’s high risk and that has happened often,” Smith said. “That’s not something where somebody should go alone.”

Brenda Smith is the director of the Project on Addressing Prison Rape at American University in Washington, D.C., and has studied the federal standards and state laws designed to protect inmates from sexual abuse. She says Idaho’s law is ”very narrow” compared to other states and could leave the state liable. (Provided by American University Washington College of Law)

Lynn considered reporting the assault to prison officials, but she thought it was too risky. 

“Either you’re gonna make your time worse, or you might get lucky and somebody will believe you, and things will get better,” she said in an interview. 

Though Lynn didn’t report the rape officially, she told another inmate what happened when she got back to the prison that night. That inmate later told police investigators that Lynn seemed scared of Quiroz after that and that Lynn had been in pain for several days afterward. 

She got out of prison later that year, but in 2020 she was arrested again for a probation violation in north Idaho. The county jail asked her a series of standard questions while booking her, including whether she had been sexually assaulted by an officer. She told the truth. 

“I was like, ‘OK, well, I know I’m going to get time, maybe they won’t send me to that prison,’” she said. 

‘A high standard’

Quiroz entered a guilty plea for the charge against him in November 2020. During the hearing, he admitted that he had sexual contact with Lynn and that the “whole allegation was true,” though no other victims were mentioned during the hearing.

But in his sentencing hearing a few months later, Farley, the prosecutor, noted that in the presentencing documents, Quiroz repeatedly used the word “consensual sex” when referring to what happened with Lynn. “This was in no way, shape or form ‘consensual sex,’” Farley said. 

“(Lynn) paints a very different picture than what the defendant paints, and quite frankly it’s the more believable picture,” Farley said. “She discussed how that medical procedure was very painful, and she talked about how the defendant was forceful with her, that he demanded that she engage in this behavior.” 

The prosecutor said the women in the prison may have been criminals, but they have also been through trauma, which is sometimes why they may turn to drugs to cope. Lynn, 33, says that was true of her. She grew up in Washington and 10 years ago was working toward a college degree, hoping to be a social worker working to keep families together. But she spiraled into depression and alcohol abuse, and soon after, she began using meth. 

In some ways, prison is “the only safe place these women have” away from drugs, Farley said in the hearing. But that also leaves them extremely vulnerable. 

“They can’t flee, they can’t get away. They feel as if they can’t resist, or their chances of freedom will be taken. And this defendant preyed upon those women. He used his position, his authority, and the power he had as a correctional officer to make these women sexual conquests,” Farley said. 

The outside of the women’s facility at the South Idaho Correctional Institution outside of Boise. (Whitney Bryen/InvestigateWest)

Quiroz’s defense attorney, Joseph Filicetti, wrote Idaho’s sexual-contact-with-a-prisoner law in the ’90s — a fact he reminded the court of frequently during the case. He asked the judge only to impose probation, adding that he’s known Quiroz since he was an “amazing” kid, when Quiroz played soccer with Filicetti’s twins. He joined the U.S. Army as an infantryman, then came back from war to become a prison guard in 2013. Filicetti described Quiroz as someone deeply affected by his time in the military that caused post-traumatic stress disorder.

“When I saw him after he came back … he was a completely different kid. He was not social. He was very aggressive. When he came in and saw me on this case, my heart was broken for him because I could tell he really had done the things,” Filicetti said. 

Quiroz’s dad testified in support of his son’s character. And then Quiroz himself spoke up, admitting he made “unethical decisions” and engaged in “reckless behavior” that he attributed to his mental health. 

“I took my mental health for granted, and that caused me to fail as a human being. I am deeply sorry for all the pain I have caused everyone here today, the victims that are in this case, the disappointment I have brought to my family, my friends, my wife and my daughter. 

“I will never hurt anyone again,” he said. 

The judge, Patrick Miller, called Quiroz a “good kid who served our country in the military,” but called his conduct “extremely reprehensible” and “predatory.”

“We have to hold people who are in positions of power to a high standard,” Miller said. 

He imposed a prison term of 10 years, with two years fixed. But Quiroz didn’t have to go to prison right away — instead, he first was to serve a “rider,” an alternative sentencing option in Idaho that offers defendants intensive rehabilitation in state custody, but away from the general prison population. If completed successfully, Quiroz wouldn’t have to serve his full term. 

Only nine months into it, Quiroz had finished his rider successfully. Farley, noting that Quiroz “did a really good rider,” did not object to his release, and the judge adjusted the sentence. Quiroz now only had to get through probation. 

Kept quiet

Since 2021, only a few cases of sexual abuse charges against Idaho Department of Correction staff have made headlines. One guard at the Pocatello Women’s Correctional Center, Derek Stettler, took his own life in 2022 after he was charged with the same crime as Quiroz. A probation officer named Saif Sabah Hasan Al Anbagi fled the country after multiple women he supervised accused him of forcing them into sexual activity.

Women incarcerated at the South Idaho Correctional Institution play cards. (Whitney Bryen/InvestigateWest)

InvestigateWest has interviewed dozens of women who accused many more guards of sexual abuse, and reporters requested records that may document allegations of misconduct against more than 40 guards, including Quiroz. The department failed to provide records on all but two guards, and in some cases records clerks said they were not sure some of the guards ever worked for the department, even though other state records and victim accounts proved otherwise. 

When asked why the Department of Correction did not notify the public or release records regarding its investigation into Quiroz or other guards, a spokesperson said in an email that the department does not release personnel records. The department declined to say whether it determined the allegations of sexual abuse against Quiroz were substantiated and why Quiroz was allowed to resign in June 2018. 

Reporters also requested sexual misconduct cases that the Department of Correction referred to the Ada County Sheriff’s Office, which until 2022 was the agency that investigated most allegations of sexual abuse in Idaho’s prisons. The sheriff’s office asked InvestigateWest to pay more than $5,000 for 85 police reports, and added that they could not guarantee all those reports were relevant. The sheriff’s office, including its spokespeople, refused to work with reporters to narrow the request. The sheriff’s legal adviser Spencer Lay told InvestigateWest’s attorneys, who were working pro bono, that the office had information that could reduce the cost of the request but refused to provide it to reporters, saying it was “no longer available for free per Idaho code.” He added that the sheriff’s office “is not the research arm” of InvestigateWest.

Idaho’s public records law allows agencies to waive fees if the information is in the public interest and the requester can’t pay the cost, but Lay denied a waiver, too, arguing it is “unclear” how allegations against publicly employed prison guards are in the public interest. InvestigateWest declined to pay the costs without assurance that doing so would result in Ada County providing the relevant documents without heavy-handed redactions. 

InvestigateWest then asked for reports on Quiroz alone. Ada County Sheriff’s Office provided the reports, but redacted descriptions of the alleged crimes that it called “personal information” that “would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” Yet in some instances, the reports did not redact victim names or their medical information. 

Lynn, released from prison for the last time shortly after Quiroz pleaded guilty, said she searched the internet for news coverage of the case. She wasn’t itching for the case to draw attention, but she was surprised to see none. 

“Why not tell the public? It’s something the public should know, what’s happening in the prison system. And it’s something that needs to be changed,” she says. “There’s so many things that go on in those walls that people don’t even realize.”

It took years for Lynn to get her life back on track. She did two years of counseling before becoming a recovery coach, helping other people get through trauma. Today, she’s married and has a daughter.

“For the longest time, I felt like I was still in my own prison, and I felt like I couldn’t trust men, obviously, like it wasn’t just that situation, but that one definitely increased it, because it was one of those situations that I couldn’t just leave where I was at. I was stuck there,” she says.

She listened to the hearings in the case for the first time this year, when provided by InvestigateWest. Despite what he did, she felt some sympathy and forgiveness for Quiroz, knowing he was going through his own mental health battle.

“At least I can see him now as a person,” she says.

Still, she worries that the leniency that the prison system and the courts gave Quiroz only made it more likely other women will be abused.

“If that’s what one deputy gets for taking advantage of his position where he’s supposed to keep people safe,” she says, “then why wouldn’t other deputies do that and have little to no consequences?”

This reporting was supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalism and the Pulitzer Center.

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Columbia man sentenced to probation after completing shock program for sorority house break-in

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Columbia man who pleaded guilty to forcing his way into a University of Missouri sorority house was released on probation.

According to court records, Jeffrey Wheeland Jr. pleaded guilty to amended charges in July. He was sentenced to seven years concurrent, seven for second-degree burglary and four years for exhibiting an unlawful use of a weapon.

As part of a plea agreement, a misdemeanor charge of fourth-degree assault was dropped. An original charge of second-degree kidnapping was also amended to unlawful use of a weapon.

As part of his sentencing, Wheeland was given probation on Oct. 14 after completing a 120-day shock program at the Department of Corrections, according to court records.

Wheeland will be on supervised probation for five years once he is released from Department of Corrections custody on Nov. 12, according to online records.

Court documents state that Wheeland forced his way into the Sigma Kappa Sorority house on Feb. 4 and locked himself in a study room occupied by a student.

Police said Wheeland was in the basement study room in the house while he was holding multiple chef knives with the door locked and blocked by a chair. Police wrote that Wheeland listened to officers when told to open the door, and he was taken into custody without incident.

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All Color Growers pumpkin patch opens tonight in Bermuda Dunes

Allie Anthony

BERMUDA DUNES, Calif. (KESQ) – The seasonal pumpkin patch at All Color Growers in Bermuda Dunes is opening its gates today, with a special promotion offering free entry for opening night only. The patch opens at 5:00 PM and will continue operating on weekends through October.

The pumpkin patch will be open Friday through Sunday this weekend and again next weekend, from October 24 to 26.

Visitors can purchase a variety of pumpkins, including fairytale pumpkins for $20 and standard orange pumpkins for $5. After tonight, entry will cost $10 per person.

For more information, the farm can be found on Instagram at @allcolorgrowers or through their official website.

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4 arrested in California standoff accused of ties to Colombian theft ring, sheriff says

By Cecilio Padilla, Carmela Karcher

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    LODI, California (KOVR) — Four people were taken into custody in Lodi on Thursday morning in connection with a string of burglaries across California.

The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office says detectives believe the group is allegedly part of an international Colombian theft ring.

Detectives had been surveilling the group since September after a jewelry store was burglarized in Sacramento County. Calling the break-in one of the “most sophisticated” detectives had seen, the sheriff’s office says the suspects managed to bore a hole through a wall and steal more than $1 million.

Other burglaries in the Bay Area and beyond were also linked to those same suspects.

Early Thursday morning, authorities were alerted about a break-in at a Lodi pawn shop on W. Lodi Avenue. The sheriff’s office says a SWAT team was deployed immediately, with detectives knowing who they were up against.

“Heard about a burglary potentially happening here at this jewelry store. Again, credit to their security system, they had a great one, so they weren’t able to actually make out with a single thing, but our folks were nearby, converged on it,” said Amar Gandhi, a Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson.

One suspect, a female, was arrested immediately, deputies say. Two other suspects were soon arrested.

Deputies say the final suspect was found hiding in a ventilation duct. Gas was eventually deployed, the sheriff’s office says, and that suspect was also taken into custody.

“They actually jammed the internet next door, as well to our business, and so we were out of internet,” said Mikey Manpreet, the owner of Lodi Pawn. “They got to the system. They did, but they weren’t successful because right when they got to it, you know, got a notification.”

The names of the suspects, who the sheriff’s office says are believed to be Colombian nationals, have not been released at this time.

Officials said two suspects have construction and demolition backgrounds, while another is an alarm specialist. Another suspect owns a jewelry store in Colombia with potential ties to the cartel.

Streets in the area were closed through most of the early morning hours. Lodi police say the streets were reopened around 7:30 a.m.

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Utah man arrested, accused of threatening to shoot people wearing red at BYU-Utah game

By Pat Reavy, KSL.com

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    HUNTINGTON, Utah (KSL) — An Emery County man was arrested Wednesday after police say he made threats to shoot people at the upcoming BYU-Utah football game.

Christopher Tai Justice, 28, of Huntington, was booked into the Emery County Jail for investigation of making a threat of violence and obstruction of justice.

Tuesday night, someone on X, formerly Twitter, made several posts under @juiceisloose328 such as “Nah, anyone wearing red on Saturday is getting shot,” “enjoy a bullet to the head,” “Any Ute fan (I) see is dead. Mark my words” and “I’ll never forget the amount of hatred I felt for Utah sitting front row for the 54-10 beat down in 2011.”

The account later posted, “I apologize for the awful tweets. I’m logging off and deactivating now.”

By Wednesday, the account was “locked.” But not before several concerned people contacted police. That prompted an investigation that included local, state and federal authorities.

Wednesday, the Emery County Sheriff’s Office was contacted by the Statewide Information and Analysis Center with the Utah Department of Public Safety after linking Justice to the alleged threat “to shoot Utes fans at the upcoming BYU vs Utah game,” according to a police booking affidavit. “(The state) told me that Tai had switched his account to private and had deleted most of the messages.”

A deputy, along with Justice’s probation officer, went to his home. Justice initially claimed “that he had deleted Twitter almost over a year ago and that he would never say anything like that,” the affidavit states.

However, the probation officer located the X app on his iPad.

Then, after linking the account with his cellphone, the probation officer “went through his phone and found some texts between him and a friend talking about the account in question. In the messages, they discuss deactivating the account. At one point in the conversation, Tai tells his friend, ‘I’ll say I didn’t post them or it’s not my account if it goes this far’ when talking about being confronted by the police,” the affidavit alleges.

When confronted with this information, Justice allegedly admitted to making the social media posts. “He then told us that he lied to us because he was scared of what could happen,” the affidavit says.

Justice, who has a history of driving on a revoked license or while intoxicated, according to court records, was on probation at the time of his arrest Wednesday after being convicted of DUI for the second time in less than 10 years.

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Small Business Spotlight: Downtown Bend’s newest spot, The Coyote, aims to bring good food and country fun

Kelsey Merison

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Last Friday, a new country spot in downtown Bend celebrated its grand opening. 

The Coyote was packed full–with a line wrapped around the building–that was once Unofficial Logging Co.

Opening night

“People know this is a place you can come and kind of be someone else for the night,” said Jordan Houle, a co-owner of The Coyote. “Put on your country best.”

It’s a lot more than just a country bar.

Small Business Spotlight: Downtown Bend's newest spot, The Coyote, aims to bring good food and country fun

“It’s a great space, it’s family-oriented,” said Jeff Berneski, another co-owner of The Coyote. “There’s a lot of different things that we put in here that people aren’t familiar with. We didn’t have an interior designer, we didn’t have any help on this. (Jordan’s) wife was a great help. She came up with a lot of the artwork and everything.”

“We did all of this from scratch. We wanted to bring in, like, a little bit of Scottsdale, Old Town vibes here… A lot of it is the ambience in here and the general aesthetic. I think people aren’t used to seeing it,” Jordan added. “The lights are crazy in here and we put up a disco-saddle.”

Jeff Berneski (co-owner) left, Jordan Houle (co-owner) middle, Justin Hodgert (co-head chef) right

Jordan and Jeff set out on a mission to bring something new to town.

“I mean, we’re the only place in town with a (mechanical) bull,” Jordan said.

It’s a space for all to enjoy. 

“We’re welcoming everyone in here,” Jeff said. “We want a safe space, we want a clean space…We just want to make it welcoming.”

Complete with merch and a full menu.

“It’s the only bar in town that offers late night food that’s not going to make you feel sick when you go out to dance,” said Justin Hodgert, co-head chef of The Coyote. “(My favorite thing on the menu is) probably the Southern Slide. It’s chicken and waffle sliders with jalapeño-maple and in-house chipotle hot sauce.”

Food options

“It’s clean food, high-quality, farm-to-table,” Justin said.

Minors are welcome until 8 p.m. and then the atmosphere shifts.

Opening night

“If you’re single, there’s definitely a sense of romance in the air. Like the anticipation that you could turn around any second and, like, bump into that person,” Jordan said. “You walk in here at night on a Friday or Saturday and there’s just that romance in the air for everyone.”

Opening night was a huge success. 

“I’m stoked about it. I think we did really good for the community,” Jeff said. “We brought everyone together. The vibes in here were really good. It was a good time.”

“There was a line around the building. There was people ordering pizza, having it delivered while they waited. Something that we didn’t expect,” Jordan added.

Opening night

And this is just the beginning.

The Coyote is located at 910 NW Harriman Street and is open Wednesday-Sunday. You can learn more about The Coyote on Instagram, @thecoyotebend

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Green Mountain Falls aquires speed camera to curb speeding in, around town

Scott Harrison

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — In a mountain town with a population of slightly more than 600, you wouldn’t expect speeding to be an issue.

But third-year mayor Todd Dixon said that it’s what his constituents ask him about the most.

“We don’t have a 24/7 police force,” he explained. “We just have a marshal and a deputy, and obviously, they can’t be here every day, 365 days a year.”

The mayor stated that a 24-hour traffic survey conducted by Marshal Sean Goings found that between 40 and 60 vehicles traveling through town were exceeding the 25 mph speed limit by at least ten or fifteen miles per hour.

Dixon said that Goings found a solution.

“Earlier this year — probably in August or September — the marshal came to us and said there was a company that would, basically, put a speed camera in,” the mayor recalled. “And they would just share in the revenues from the tickets. That’s how they would get paid. So, it’s literally a no-cost issue for the town.”

The camera, which went online on Wednesday, is a mobile unit that records drivers who exceed the speed limit, takes photos of the license plates, and sends the owners a $40 citation.

“Our goal isn’t to make a profit,” Dixon insisted. “We’re just trying to get people to slow down. The biggest concern we have is a child or a pedestrian being hit, injured, or killed.

To that end, the town has also installed a radar speed sign on Ute Pass Avenue, the main street there; it alerts drivers to their speed and compares it to the posted speed limit.

Dixon said that for the first 30 days, violators will have a grace period from camera fines and receive only a warning.

The mayor also revealed that speeding is a concern not only in town, but on US 24 above the town, past two connecting intersections.

Dixon said that the marshal’s survey found highway speeds often exceeding the 55 mph limit, with one driver going as fast as 93 mph.

“I was thinking there were around 13 incidents from 2017 to 2023,” he said.

Goings is asking the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) to install two cameras, one in each direction, on the highway.

“Our jurisdiction includes both sides of the highway,” Dixon said.

The mayor said that Goings is gathering data on traffic citations from the Colorado State Patrol (CSP) and crash data from CDOT to further justify the need for highway cameras.

“It could take months to get a decision,” Dixon said.

The town’s Board of Trustees recently passed an ordinance authorizing Goings to take action in the matter.

“I’ve also heard that Chipita Park (a neighboring town) is also having speeding issues.” Dixon said.

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University of San Francisco athletic director dies during morning workout on campus, officials say

By KGO Staff

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    SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — University of San Francisco announced Thursday that Athletic Director Larry Williams died during a morning workout on campus. He was 62.

“Our prayers go out to Larry’s wife, Laura, their children, Kristin, Sean, Scott, Eric, and Louis, their families, and his grandchildren. Our thoughts and prayers also go to the university’s 250 student-athletes and all of the coaches and staff under Larry’s skillful watch over the past three years,” the university said in a statement.

Williams was named USF’s athletic director in 2022.

He is an eight-year NFL veteran and earned his JD from University of San Diego School of Law while playing with the San Diego Chargers. Williams had also played with the Cleveland Browns, New Orleans Saints, and the New England Patriots.

USF said it has made counseling resources and University Ministry support services available on campus to support grieving students, faculty and staff.

Stephanie Shrieve-Hawkins, USF’s deputy athletics director for administration and facilities, has been named the interim athletic director.

Williams’ cause of death was not released.

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