54-year-old Moberly man accused of child sex crime

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 54-year-old man from Moberly has been charged with enticing a child younger than 17 years old.

John Teel is being held at the Randolph County Jail on a $100,000 bond. A court date has not been scheduled.

The probable cause statement says someone described as a witness went to the Moberly Police Department on Sept. 21 after they learned the child received sexually explicit messages on Instagram from Teel.

The statement says messages dated back to Aug. 15 and included Teel asking to meet with the victim in person and for them to perform sexual acts. Teel has previously met the victim and knows they are a child, court documents say.

Teel allegedly told police that he said “no” to meeting the victim, though law enforcement noted in court documents that was not the case.

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University of Missouri, City of Columbia release joint list of crime-fighting plans

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Auditing criminal cases arising from incidents downtown and adding county deputies and state troopers to patrol shifts are among the plans Columbia and University of Missouri leaders have for reducing crime.

MU and the City of Columbia on Wednesday put out a list of actions they’re taking to make downtown safer after a shooting over homecoming weekend killed a woman and hurt two other innocent bystanders. A Florida man has been charged with murder for allegedly firing 11 shots into a crowd.

The action plan includes:

Increase staffing at the Columbia Police Department and MUPD.

CPD and MUPD will continue the increase in foot patrol in the downtown region during peak weekend hours.

Missouri Department of Highway Patrol will provide troopers to patrol downtown during peak hours of the weekend.

Boone County Sheriff Dwayne Carey will also provide additional deputies to patrol downtown Columbia.

Meet with Western District of Missouri Attorney Matt Price to discuss federal resources and other programs to improve public safety.

Meet with Gov. Mike Kehoe to discuss state resources and other programs to improve safety.

Support the “Ride Home” program that returns people who come to the city for health care to their home community outside of Boone County.

Request that every downtown business owner complete a letter of enforcement.

Conduct a review of city ordinances to improve crowd control and safety – especially downtown. Immediate actions will be taken when appropriate.

Conduct a review of downtown to address environmental issues, including lighting, business hours of operation, individuals sleeping on or blocking sidewalks and traffic flow for vehicles. Immediate actions will be taken when appropriate.

Conduct an internal audit of all cases handled by the Boone County Prosecutor’s Office involving weapons offenses downtown as well as trespass, peace disturbance, and misdemeanor assault cases county-wide to ensure these offenses are being prosecuted consistently, effectively and in alignment with office goals and community safety priorities. Immediate actions will be taken when appropriate.

University of Missouri System President Mun Choi wrote a letter to city and county leaders after the shooting early Saturday, urging action and saying he planned to get Kehoe involved. City officials have responded with the idea of a task force and other plans, including increased patrols.

Records obtained by ABC 17 News show a string of emails that Choi sent to city leaders that led up to the list released to the public. Most of Choi’s proposed action items made it into the final plan.

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Two changes of note include adding increased staffing for MUPD as well as CPD, and dropping a line that read “arrest individuals that accost or harass vehicle owners.”

Newly appointed U.S. Attorney Matthew Price also responded to Choi, saying his office is eager to meet with Columbia leaders about federal resources to address what he called an “emerging crisis.” Emails also show that Choi spoke with Price on a call on Sept. 29.

As part of the plan, the city will audit downtown weapons cases from the Boone County prosecutor’s office.

“We suggested that as something we could do right away to make sure that we don’t have any cases that are slipping through the cracks,” Boone County Prosecutor Roger Johnson said. “It’s not just violent crime that we’re looking at. It’s also a serious and ongoing concern that we have a lot of mental health-related crime, especially in the downtown area.”

The city is also asking local businesses to sign “letters of enforcement” allowing police to act on trespassing issues.

“For trespassing, only the person who owns the property can kick somebody off of the property and can request them to leave,” Johnson said. “The letter of enforcement authorizes somebody else to do that on your behalf.”

Choi has also invited city leaders to walk with him downtown late Saturday night into Sunday.

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Two-month-old baby dies at the Calexico Port of Entry

Karina Bazarte

CALEXICO, Calif. (KYMA) – A two-month-old baby was pronounced dead at the Calexico Port of Entry Tuesday morning.

The Calexico Fire Department (CPD) says they received a medical call at the Calexico Port of Entry and once they arrived, U.S Customs and Border Protection were performing CPR on a two-month-old baby.

“Our paramedics on scene noticing that the two-month-old had very little signs of life. Obviously, no signs of life…some dilated pupils. It seemed like the baby had been down for quite sometime,” said Fire Chief Juan Contreras.

According to CFD, the mother said she had taken her baby to an emergency hospital in Mexicali a day before, but due to the delays and staffing at the hospital, the mother decided to self monitor at the infant at home.

About two hours before going to the port of entry, the mother stated that she noticed the infant was unresponsive and decided to make her way to the border.

U.S Customs and Border Protection activated 911.

“Our paramedics on scene decided to call bays hospital which is P.M.H Pioneers Memorial and pretty much give a rundown on what the whole scene was and the status of the infant,” said Fire Chief Juan Contreras.

According to the fire chief, Dr.Diaz who was helping, said to stop CPR and the baby was pronounced dead around 3 AM Tuesday. 

“ICSO corners office made contact so the baby was left at the port of entry and waited for ICSO with their corners for a pick up,” said Contreras.

It’s unclear where the mother was taking the infant.

We reached out to CBP about the incident and we are waiting to hear back.

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Portneuf Medical Center kicks off Breast Cancer Awareness Month with free drive-thru breakfast

Sam Ross

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI)– Portneuf Medical Center hosted its 26th annual ‘Brake for Breakfast’ event on Wednesday to raise awareness for breast cancer and spread resources for screenings and checkups.

The drive-thru-style breakfast event is a free tradition that draws hundreds to kick off National Breast Cancer Awareness Month in October.

“We want to give people information on breast cancer awareness,” said Rob Dye, clinical social worker for the Portneuf Cancer Center. “One of the major things is catching it early–the earlier that people can find the cancer, the better we can get on it, better outcomes, easier process; that’s a major thing we want people to know.”

Drivers who showed up to the Brake for Breakfast event were given a gift bag with some breakfast foods and pamphlets with resources and contacts for breast cancer screenings and mammograms.

According to the American Breast Cancer Foundation, women over the age of 40 should have annual mammograms. Women with a family history of breast cancer or those with health concerns should speak with their doctor about the best time to start screenings and checkups.

For more information about Breast Cancer Awareness Month and local resources, visit the Portneuf Medical Center website.

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Conservationist Jane Goodall, whose work revolutionized the study of primates, has died

CNN Newsource

Originally Published: 01 OCT 25 14:21 ET

Updated: 01 OCT 25 14:55 ET

By Tricia Escobedo, Michael Rios, CNN

(CNN) — Jane Goodall, whose lifelong work as a primatologist helped broaden the world’s understanding of animal behavior and emotions, has died, her institute said Wednesday. She was 91.

Her field studies with chimpanzees not only broke barriers for women and changed the way scientists study animals, but documented emotions and personality traits within these primates that blurred the line between humans and the animal kingdom.

She passed away due to natural causes in California during a speaking tour in the United States, according to her institute.

“Dr. Goodall’s discoveries as an ethologist revolutionized science, and she was a tireless advocate for the protection and restoration of our natural world,” the institute said in a statement on social media.

The United Nations, which named her a Messenger of Peace in 2002, mourned her death, said on X she “worked tirelessly for our planet and all its inhabitants, leaving an extraordinary legacy for humanity and nature.”

Goodall arrived in Tanzania’s Gombe Stream Chimpanzee Reserve in 1960 at the request of her boss, renowned anthropologist and paleontologist Dr. Louis Leakey. There, the 26-year-old who had long been fascinated with Africa and its animals – but had no formal higher education – began her groundbreaking work observing and studying these intellectual primates in their natural habitat.

At first, the chimps ran away from her.

“They’d never seen a white ape before,” Goodall told Deepak Chopra in 2019.

That all changed when she met an older chimp she named David Graybeard. After following David through the forest, she offered him a palm nut.

“He took the nut, he dropped it, but very gently squeezed my fingers,” Goodall recalled. “That’s how chimpanzees reassure each other.

“So in that moment, we communicated in a way that must have predated human language.”

Living among the chimpanzees in Gombe, Goodall discovered that chimps ate meat and not only used tools – but made them too.

“I watched, spellbound, as the chimps set off to a termite mound, picked a small leafy twig, then stripped of it of its leaves,” Goodall said in the 2017 documentary “Jane.” The chimps poked the stripped twigs into the mound and easily gathered clumps of termites to eat.

“That was object modification, the crude beginning of tool making – it had never been seen before.”

This young Briton, who was pursuing her Ph.D in animal behavior despite not having an undergraduate degree, spent months ingratiating herself with the local chimpanzee population, instead of studying them at arm’s length. She gave them names and learned to read their emotions.

“When I first began studying the chimpanzees there was nobody to tell me how I do it,” Goodall recalled. “In 1960, the world knew nothing about chimpanzees in the wild.”

Goodall’s discoveries and her methodology caused quite a stir within academic and scientific circles:  Crawling through the forest to study chimpanzees that she named instead of numbered, documenting their personalities and feelings — this shocked her fellow ethologists. She was told she’d conducted the whole study wrong, but Goodall held firm in her beliefs.

“My observations at Gombe would challenge human uniqueness,” Goodall said. “There were some who tried to discredit my observations because I was a young, untrained girl and should therefore be disregarded.”

Goodall was one of three women selected by Leakey to study primates in their natural habitat as part of his effort to better understand human evolution. While Goodall focused on chimps, Dian Fossey studied gorillas and Birutė Galdikas studied orangutans. They were sometimes referred to as “Leakey’s Angels” – a nod to the 1970s TV hit series “Charlie’s Angels.”

The world would learn about Goodall and her work in 1963 after her first article appeared in National Geographic titled “My Life Among Wild Chimpanzees.”

Leakey secured a grant from the National Geographic Society for Goodall to continue her work, and in 1962, National Geographic sent filmmaker Baron Hugo van Lawick to Gombe to document Jane’s work with the chimpanzees. The two fell in love, married in 1964 and had a son three years later.

Goodall earned her doctorate in ethology – the study of animal behavior – from Cambridge University in 1965, and that same year she and van Lawick established the Gombe Stream Research Center.

To this day, the small forest of Gombe on the banks of Lake Tanganyika is home to the longest, most detailed study of an animal in its natural habitat anywhere in the world.

A budding scientist

Born in London, Goodall says her fascination with animal behavior was sparked when her mother took her to visit a country farm when she was four and a half years old.

“It was really exciting, I can still remember meeting cows and pigs and sheep face to face,” Goodall recalled in 2019 on Chopra’s Infinite Potential podcast.

At the farm, she wandered off to an empty henhouse where she waited patiently to observe a hen laying an egg.

“Mom had been desperately looking for me, nobody knew where I was, they’d called the police,” Goodall said.

“You can imagine how worried she was, but when … she saw my shining eyes (she) sat down to hear the wonderful story of how a hen lays an egg.”

She credited her mother’s support at that moment – and later in life – for paving the way for her career.

“A different kind of mother might have crushed that scientific curiosity – and I might not have done what I have done.”

Goodall spent much of her childhood outside, at the top of her favorite tree reading “in my own private world … daydreaming about life in the forest with Tarzan.”

That’s when she decided she wanted to go to Africa to live with the animals and write about them.

She never wavered from her dream and, as a young woman, she worked and “saved every penny I could” to travel to Africa.

“Everybody laughed at me because I was just a girl, we didn’t have any money (and) World War Two was raging,” she recalled.

She was always encouraged by her mother, who told her to “work hard, take advantage of opportunity, but above all, never give up.”

Taking her message to the world

Jane Goodall’s original mission in Gombe was to learn everything she could about chimpanzees – humans’ closest living relatives – in the hopes that their behavior “might provide us with a window on our past,” she said.

“I always am amazed at how similar we are to chimpanzees and, for that matter, other animals, too – sharing emotions like fear and pain and anger and things like that,” Goodall said.

“Chimpanzees learn by observing … but (humans) can with words discuss the past and tell stories about it, and perhaps make use of it. Chimpanzees can certainly make plans for the immediate future – but we can make plans for what we’re going to do 10 years ahead.”

And she said that ability to communicate verbally gives humans a unique responsibility to preserve the planet.

“Isn’t it bizarre that the most intellectual creatures to ever walk the planet is destroying its only home? It seems to me there’s a disconnect between this extremely intellectual mind and the human heart, which is love and compassion.”

Goodall started focusing her efforts on environmental preservation after attending a conference on conservation in Africa in 1986.

“It was shocking to see right across Africa, wherever chimps were being studied, forests were disappearing,” she said.

“That’s when I realized that … the role that I must play was to make sure the next generation was better stewards than we’d been. And I needed to take that message to the world.”

“I went to the conference as a scientist. I left as an activist.”

Today, the Jane Goodall Institute that she founded in 1977 devotes a huge portion of its efforts to wildlife conservation, working closely with Gombe National Park’s surrounding communities to advance human prospects and guard its natural treasures.

In 2017, the Institute partnered with Google Earth, using the state-of-the-art satellite technology to closely monitor the park and its chimps.

Goodall showed no signs of slowing down in her 80s, traveling some 300 days a year to meet with world leaders about climate change, visit conservation projects, and support her Roots & Shoots youth environmental program.

The Covid-19 outbreak brought her travel to a halt in 2020, but Goodall continued spreading her message virtually, speaking out about climate change as well as her thoughts on what led to the coronavirus pandemic.

“Our too close relationship with wild animals in the markets or when we use them for entertainment has unleashed the terror and misery of new viruses,” she said on Anderson Cooper Full Circle.

When asked what she thought her legacy should be, Goodall told CNN’s Becky Anderson that she hoped it would be “giving young people hope and … a sense of empowerment.”

CNN’s Thomas Page and Olivia Yasukawa contributed to this report

The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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Cole County judge again rejects secretary of state ballot summary for anti-abortion amendment

Matthew Sanders

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Cole County judge has, for the second time, rejected the secretary of state’s ballot summary for a constitutional amendment that would outlaw abortion across Missouri.

Judge Daniel Green refused to accept Secretary of State Denny Hoskins’ second attempt to write the language for Amendment 3 on Tuesday. Green ordered Hoskins to take care of problems with a bullet point.

Green wrote in the order that the bullet point does not sufficiently explain what the amendment would change — in this case, outlawing abortion. Amendment 3, which will be on the November 2026 ballot pending legal challenges, would overturn a constitutional amendment approved by voters last year that legalized abortion.

Hoskins — a Republican who is staunchly against abortion — was given five days to submit a revised summary.

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“This Program Saved My Life” – Santa Barbara Recovery Lifeline Expands Amid Addiction Crisis

Patricia Martellotti

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) — Santa Barbara is facing a growing addiction crisis that is straining families and community services, but one local program is giving people hope — and a second chance.

Good Samaritan’s Food for Good Recovery Program combines meals with culinary training to help people overcome addiction while learning new life skills.

For Juan Carvajal, the program has been transformative.

“It changed my life,” he said while preparing lunch with the Food for Good crew in Goleta. “It made me a better man … to do better things, make better choices.”

The program not only provides daily meals but also teaches clients how to cook and build confidence in the kitchen.

“It’s special because we get to help people that have been dealt a bad hand in life,” one program leader explained. “They’re able to learn skills and build confidence.”

Carvajal said the support he received inspired him to give back.

“I got the help here. It makes me feel like I’ll help somebody else too,” he said.

Organizers say demand is growing quickly, with more people reaching out for help every week

“We feed over 156,000 people per year from this kitchen and another one in North County,” one staff member noted.

The program even incorporates fresh ingredients from its own farm.

“Look at these eggs, they’re grown at our farm,” an employee said. “We have chickens and ducks.”

The program’s mission goes beyond meals. Leaders emphasize that Food for Good provides stability, job training, and a pathway forward.

“There are so many different types of homelessness — from being a foster child to somebody living in your car,” a staff member said. “We teach and build their skill set so that hopefully they can get a job in the culinary field.”

For clients like Carvajal, the daily routine has become a source of strength.

“It keeps me busy learning how to cook, learning new things every day,” he said.

Organizers hope to continue expanding the culinary program to reach even more people in Santa Barbara County. And behind every meal served, they say, is a story of resilience and hope.

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During Firefighter Appreciation Month Santa Barbara and SLO Counties Record No Names Lost

Jarrod Zinn

SANTA MARIA, Calif. (KEYT) – The California Fire Foundation and the state legislature have designated October as Firefighter Appreciation Month.

This year’s public memorial will once again honor our fallen heroes.

The California Fire Foundation has programs in place to support any responders or their families, throughout the state of California.

“Being a firefighter is dangerous,” says Brian K. Rice, president of the California Fire Foundation. “It can be deadly. It’s dirty.”

Starting with the Palisades and Eaton fires, 2025 has seen a higher level of wildfire activity than usual, all across the state.

“The number of calls is up there,” says Rice. “We’ve had 7200 wildfires this year to date. We’ve had 31 fatalities.”

On Saturday in Sacramento, a public ceremony will honor the lives of 30 fallen firefighters from California who have died in the line of duty, adding their names to the memorial wall.

“40 million people live in the state of California,” says Rice. “Our natural resources and our wildland area is always under constant, constant stress.”

Officials from the fire departments in Santa Barbara and SLO counties say they will not be adding any names, which is certainly a good thing for our Central Coast communities.

“Any time a fire department gets through the year without having a line of duty death, that’s a win,” says Rice. “But I will tell you, the California firefighters memorial is a living memorial because at this point in time, there will not be a year that passes in my lifetime that we don’t add a firefighter’s name to that wall.”

Saturday’s memorial service is open for public attendance, and will stream live on multiple platforms.

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Oregon adds oral nicotine tax to fund wildfire prevention and recovery; local lawmaker was behind the move

Claire Elmer

(Update: Adding video, Senator Broadman’s comments)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — After being passed by the Oregon Legislature with bipartisan support earlier this summer, a tax on oral nicotine in House Bill 3940 has now taken effect.

The amendment of HB 3940 regarding oral nicotine was presented by Senator Anthony Broadman (D-Bend) as a solution to help fund Oregon’s wildfire efforts — both prevention and recovery.

The tax adds 65 cents on nicotine pouches with up to 20 units, plus an additional 3 cents per extra unit. Prior to the implementation, oral, synthetic nicotine was not taxed in the state of Oregon, unlike more traditional tobacco products.

KTVZ News spoke with Broadman on Wednesday about the tax and how it’s being implemented.

“We want to make sure that we’re working with our public health partners, and working with the rest of our revenue picture. to make sure that every tax, whether it’s nicotine or fuel, is applied fairly and equitably,” Broadman said.

“People see the importance of funding wildfire mitigation, and I think that’s why this bill was so popular throughout our state,” he added.

 One-third of the new oral nicotine tax’s proceeds will go to Oregon’s Landscape Resiliency Fund, and two-thirds will go to a Community Risk Reduction Fund.

“The most effective way to fund wildfire is to get it early is to prevent the fires from turning into conflagrations at all,” the lawmaker said.

With many Oregonians already struggling with cost of living, increasing the price of any product isn’t always the most popular decision, but officials say the tax is small compared to other states and helps discourage the use of addictive substances.

Broadman said he will continue to fight for more funding for Central Oregon, to ensure our forests and communities are healthy and safe.

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Palm Springs Aerial Tram to host 38th annual 6K walk/run challenge

City News Service

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – The 38th annual Road Challenge 6k run/walk will take place later this month at the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway, officials said today.

The event will be held Oct. 18, with a start line at the bottom of the Tramway and a finish line at the Tram’s Valley station.   

The 6k walk will begin at 6:30 a.m., with a 7 a.m. start time for runners.   

The road will have an elevation gain of more than 1,800 feet for the 3.7-mile challenge.

All participants who complete the course will receive a T-shirt and a special finisher’s medal, and a festival with vendor booths and complimentary breakfast snacks will be available.

Additionally, awards will be given for eligible running participants in the top three in each age group and in each division’s category, including male, female and non-binary.

The Tramway will be closed until around 11 a.m. that day, and spectator shuttles will run from 5:30 a.m. to 6 a.m. from the Visitors Center.   

For more information or to register online, visit tramroadchallenge.com

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