Nurse practitioner arrested, accused of enticing a minor

By Logan Stefanich, KSL.com

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    LEHI, Utah (KSL) — A South Jordan man and mental health nurse practitioner was arrested Monday for investigation of enticing a minor.

A Utah County sheriff’s deputy was working undercover online, posing as an adult male with two young children, targeting individuals with a sexual interest in children through a social media app, according to a police booking affidavit.

The deputy was eventually contacted by an individual with the username “Ginger” who was later identified as Joel Thomas Covington, 46, the affidavit alleges, who “made references to my young children he was sexually interested (in), specifically an 8-year-old boy.”

“Joel made plans with me to meet me and the child and engage in sexual activity. Joel made reference to his ‘greatest fantasy’ being that he be sexually active with a young boy and asked that I travel to his home so that he could meet the boy. He made references to wanting to play spin the bottle or strip poker with the child,” the affidavit alleges.

The deputy said Covington’s employment “was identified as a psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner in Lehi,” according to the affidavit. “Because of his position of trust, I made the determination to not wait for the meeting that Joel wanted to arrange and for the safety of others, went to his place of employment, where he was arrested in the parking lot.”

Covington said “he was not going to go through with having sexual contact with the child,” and said “he had these taboo conversations in order to fulfill sexual desires,” according to the arrest report.

Covington was booked into Utah County Jail for investigation of enticing a minor. The affidavit requests that he be held without bail.

Alliance Behavioral Psychiatry lists Joel Covington as a psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner, but the business declined to comment.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Imperial County selects new vice chair

Karina Bazarte

IMPERIAL COUNTY, Calif. (KYMA) – A new temporary vice chair has been selected after Imperial County Supervisor Jesus Escobar decided to step down from those duties due to a lawsuit he’s facing.

Peggy Price was nominated by Supervisor Martha Cardenas-Singh to be the new temporary vice chair.

Price says she will be taking on several tasks like supporting the chairman and taking over if the chairman is absent.

“Right now, it is temporary, so in terms of the long term goals, it’s here to support the chairman and his goals that he has set…but should this continue on into the next year and [if] I were to come into position being vice chairman, then I would have to think about it that is going to happen what my goals and priorities are,” said Price.

The former clerk of the board filed a lawsuit this year accusing Escobar of workplace misconduct, sexual harassment, and wrongful termination.

It is unclear when the lawsuit will be resolved.

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Mom arrested, accused of ‘child torture’ of 4-month-old baby

By Pat Reavy, KSL.com

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    MIDVALE, Utah (KSL) — A Midvale mother was arrested Tuesday after police say was torturing her 4-month-old baby daughter by doing such things as burning her face, taping her mouth shut and taping her hands behind her back.

Lizbeth Hurtado-Breton, 36, was booked into the Salt Lake County Jail for investigation of child torture and two counts of aggravated child abuse.

On Tuesday, the Division of Child and Family Services contacted Unified police after a young girl was taken to Primary Children’s Hospital with severe burns on her face.

“The child also has several bone fractures and a brain bleed and several other injuries in different phases of healing,” according to a police booking affidavit.

When officers spoke to the girl’s father, he said “mom was trying to do a home remedy on the 4-month-old when she received burns on her face,” the affidavit states.

“The father stated Lizbeth told him she held the baby over steam, then wiped the baby’s face with a napkin, which wiped off skin. The father reported there was a time when he returned home from work (and) found tape covering the baby’s mouth. (The father) asked the mother, Lizbeth Hurtado-Breton, why there was tape on (the girl’s) mouth and Lizbeth stated she would not stop crying,” according to the affidavit.

On another occasion, the father said he came home from work to find the girl’s arms taped behind her back “so the baby would eat,” police noted in the affidavit.

“The father reported witnessing Lizbeth shoving a baby bottle down the baby’s face causing the baby to choke on the milk and not be able to breathe. The father was able to provide photos of the baby with tape on the mouth, a video of the mother force-feeding the baby (and) a photo of the arm where he believed the tape had been,” according to the arrest report.

“The father stated Lizbeth wished the baby would have been a boy and believes this is why Lizbeth has been so awful to the baby and not awful to the older siblings.”

When questioned by police, Hurtado-Breton allegedly said she must have held the girl over a “humidifier” too long while trying to relieve congestion. Officers later clarified that the humidifier was actually “a cooking pot.”

“Lizbeth said her hands were feeling ‘very hot’ while she did this but she did not think about how the steam would feel on (the girl’s) face. Lizbeth stated she had brought the water to a boil to create the steam. Lizbeth stated the baby cried all the time and would not eat. Lizbeth said the ‘easiest thing’ to do was to put medical tape over (the girl’s) mouth to hold her pacifier in place in her mouth,” the police affidavit says.

Hurtado-Breton was booked into jail after her interview with detectives.

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Driver arrested after following woman home in road rage incident, police say

By Óscar Contreras

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    BROOMFIELD, Colorado (KMGH) — A Broomfield man has been arrested after reportedly following a woman to her home following a road rage incident last week.

The incident happened Friday near Zuni Street and 144th Avenue. Police said a 28-year-old woman told them that after inadvertently cutting off a truck in traffic, the driver – only identified as a 62-year-old man – followed her to her home.

The suspect admitted to following the woman and positioning his vehicle “in a manner that blocked hers in the driveway after she had parked,” according to a spokesperson with the police department.

Police said the suspect left a short time later but was observed continuing to circle the neighborhood. The driver was arrested and booked into the Broomfield Detention Center on a harassment charge, the spokesperson said.

“If you ever find yourself the victim of road rage remember to stay calm, avoid engaging and call the police,” they added.

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TikTok video alerts Yuma community of dozens of abandoned dogs found in a home

Danyelle Burke North

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – The Yuma community is coming together to help dozens of abandoned dogs living in deplorable conditions. 

Local attention grew after a neighbor posted a video on TikTok showing the dogs roaming around the yard.

The Humane Society worked with Homeward Bound Animal Rescue to help take in the majority of the dogs to the shelter.

“We did recover 26 dogs in total who are here at the shelter now. They are safe. We are continuing to work with neighbors and other volunteers and Homeward Bound in order to get the remaining 5-7 dogs off of the property and get them assessed for their health and everything,” said Hilary Mulherin, Humane Society of Yuma Development Manager.

They describe some of the conditions they found the dogs in.

“This is something unlike what we have seen really ever. We get hoarding cases from time to time, but this is hoarding plus really deplorable conditions. I mean those animals were living in their own filth for who knows how long [they were] kennel’d. And seemingly surprisingly, they are actually quite healthy, considering their conditions they were living in,” said Mulherin.

The Yuma County Sheriff’s Office says they filed an animal cruelty case and the owner could face some charges. 

The Humane Society says rescue partners have been working with them in the Phoenix area taking in some of the dogs.

If you want to help support the dogs, you can help foster or make food and monetary donations to the Humane Society of Yuma.

 

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Man given probation for crashing into Border Patrol checkpoint nearly two years ago

Eduardo Morales

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – It was an emotional day in the court Tuesday afternoon as 67-year-old Rogelio Sanchez was sentenced to four years standard supervised probation.

Sanchez crashed his pickup truck into a Border Patrol checkpoint in Yuma, injuring two agents in the process in October of 2023.

“Everyday since then has been a battle just to hold on to what little remains,” said one of the agents.

They described the pain she has endured since the crash. 

“And just like that, I lost everything one night. I lost pieces of myself, I lost my arm, I lost my kidney, half of my liver, and other body parts,” she says.

Sanchez was found guilty of attempted aggravated assault after agreeing to a plea deal earlier this year.

Sanchez and members of his family who were also in the car spoke in court Tuesday, saying it was all an accident.

“I want to apologize to all the people I injured. It was never my intention. It was an accident,” said Sanchez.

The judge said that she believes the crash was not intentional, and recognized Sanchez’s remorse while also understanding how this crash impacted the victims. 

The Probation Office will determine when Sanchez can begin serving his sentence. 

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University of Arizona researcher works on new weed spraying technology alongside small Czech Business

Eduardo Morales

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – Researchers from the University of Arizona, along with a Czech start up company Ulmanna, are looking to improve weeding machines.

They are working on the next generation of high precision, high speed weeding in desert farms.

Weeding is removing plants not wanted in the crops.

Those working on the technology explain how it uses artificial intelligence.

“Working with Ulmanna and their vision system, which is based on Artificial Intelligence to identify where those weeds are and activate that precision sprayer at the centimeter level of accuracy,” said Dr. Martin Siemens, an associate professor of Biosystem Engineering.

They plan to conduct formal field testing this fall.

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Investors keep buying up houses in low-income neighborhoods. One nonprofit is fighting back.

By Michelle Jarboe

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    CLEVELAND (WEWS) — Anne Dalzell and her husband, John, decided more than 30 years ago to build a life together in Cleveland’s Collinwood neighborhood.

For almost a decade, they’ve owned a home on a quiet street, about a one-mile walk from Lake Erie. And they’ve watched the house next door change hands several times.

An Ohio company bought it for $35,500 in 2017. A few years later, a New York-based investor paid $80,000 – adding the property to a portfolio of more than 40 rental homes in Cleveland and nearby suburbs, according to loan records.

“The worst part, from our point of view, was the porch roof was falling down,” Dalzell said, describing how the two-bedroom house gradually deteriorated.

“The renters that we had … were nice people,” she added. “But they weren’t gonna do anything. They had trouble just keeping the lawn mowed.”

Then the property went vacant. And a local nonprofit stepped in, buying the almost century-old house and renovating it as part of a bid to raise property values, boost homeownership and price investors out of the market.

“It’s gonna be a multi-year approach,” said KC Petraitis, vice president of real estate for that nonprofit, Cleveland Neighborhood Progress. “And it should be, right?”

New research from the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland shows that investors now own one in three single-family homes in some pockets of Northeast Ohio. Last year, real estate speculators, flippers and landlords were responsible for 43% of the house purchases across hotspots – mainly low-income neighborhoods – of the Buckeye State and western Pennsylvania.

And more of those investors are coming from other states, including California, New York, Florida and Nevada, said Matt Klesta, a senior policy analyst at the Cleveland Fed.

It’s a phenomenon he’s been hearing about for years, in roundtable discussions and community surveys. So he dug into the data, analyzing home sales and ownership in seven counties – and drilling down in the places where investors are the most active.

“Some investors come in and they buy a home, they fix it up and they’re a very good landlord. Or they sell it to an owner-occupant,” Klesta said during a recent interview.

But others aren’t doing much – minimizing spending and trying to maximize profits in a market where there’s still plenty of cheap real estate and steady renter demand.

“Unfortunately, those are the ones you see,” Klesta said. “You drive down the street and don’t really see the well-maintained homes. But you’re gonna see that house that’s got some problems going on … You really see the bad actors.”

In a research paper published in early September, Klesta explains his findings and talks about trends. He doesn’t take a position on investor ownership of single-family homes – activity that some state and federal lawmakers want to curb.

“We don’t make policy recommendations,” Klesta said of the Fed, which produces research as part of its effort to better understand how the economy is working for people.

“But,” he said of that research, “we want to get it into the hands of people that do, so they can make that informed decision.”

‘It is a boxing match’ Petraitis has seen firsthand the damage that absentee landlords can do.

“When you don’t know what your house looks like and you don’t know what your tenants are doing on a day-to-day basis, that’s a problem,” he said.

Cleveland Neighborhood Progress is using a mix of public and philanthropic money to buy houses and fix them up for owner-occupants. The nonprofit won’t sell to investors.

To avoid displacing tenants, it also won’t buy occupied rental properties.

The housing investments are part of a broader effort to shore up so-called “middle neighborhoods” – working-class stretches of Cleveland that are at a tipping point, teetering between growth and decline.

“We went around and we said, ‘Hey, we think we can launch a housing initiative to kind of combat a couple different things,’” Petraitis said. “One was investor activity. … Two was building equity for homeowners that still live on these streets, to really make sure that they feel comfortable in these areas before we lead down a pathway of decline by disinvestment. Which is a long and slow death. But once it occurs, it becomes very expensive to resolve – if you can resolve it.”

Over the last two years, Cleveland Neighborhood Progress affiliates have acquired 19 houses in four city neighborhoods: Collinwood and Lee-Harvard on the East Side, and Old Brooklyn and Jefferson to the west.

Many of those purchases are in hotspot areas that Klesta identified in his analysis – places that have been magnets for investors over the last few years.

“It is a boxing match,” Petraitis said of competing against investors to buy homes. “It is not a one-round-knockout kind of situation. We are going to be here for multiple rounds, and we’re not going anywhere.”

The nonprofit’s willing to take some financial hits now, with the goal of boosting housing quality and filling gaps in the market.

Cleveland Neighborhood Progress paid $85,000 for the rental house that Dalzell and her husband were so tired of looking at. Then the nonprofit spent more than $180,000 to fix it up, according to city permitting records.

“I was really surprised at how much they did to it,” Dalzell said, while standing in her front yard. “I mean, it was a little two-bedroom, one-bath place.”

Now, there are four bedrooms and two bathrooms inside. Workers transformed the unfinished attic into living space. Outside, there’s fresh siding, a new porch, a white fence around the backyard and a new two-car garage.

Contractors also gutted the kitchen, installed new windows and replaced all of the mechanical systems in the basement. The house went up for sale in February and recently went under contract at just under $205,000 – about $60,000 shy of the total project cost.

Other home-renovation projects will be less dramatic, and less costly, Petraitis said. Cleveland Neighborhood Progress has purchased three more houses on Dalzell’s street, so far, and four more within a few blocks.

“It’s a chess board,” Petraitis said of determining where – and how much – to invest. “I’m gonna lose the pawn here. But I gotta think strategically down the road.”

He and his coworkers aim to buy, renovate and sell 200 homes through the middle neighborhoods initiative. They’ve raised almost $12 million toward a potential $22 million program budget, which will cover residential projects and investments along commercial corridors.

So far, the money is coming from the City of Cleveland, Cleveland City Council, the state, Rocket Community Fund, KeyBank and the Cleveland Browns.

“Assuming the market conditions get ripe and get better, we should be at break-even – maybe even make a little bit on the backside,” Petraitis said of taking the long view.

Dalzell likes what she sees from her porch.

Since 2016, she and her husband have invested steadily in their home, where they can live on the first floor as they age. They’re not planning to move anytime soon.

One of their adult sons lives in the basement. A family friend lives upstairs.

“We did what we did to this house because we plan to stay here,” she said. “We’re in the neighborhood for the duration.”

Now that investment seems a bit more secure.

“We don’t have to worry about covering the mortgage when we go to move out,” she said, gesturing to the newly renovated house next door. “Cause, you know, that’s definitely gonna help.”

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Father and son who became aware of each other through DNA testing meet for the first time

By Rett Nelson, EastIdahoNews.com

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    TWIN FALLS, Idaho (eastidahonews.com) — Two men on opposite sides of the country started searching years ago for their long-lost relatives. That search brought them face-to-face for the first time last Friday.

Kevin Thompson, 55, of Twin Falls, met his biological father, Paul Griffith, 82, of Dayton, Ohio. They met in Twin Falls after about two years of phone conversations.

In a Zoom call with EastIdahoNews.com, Thompson says this culminated in a 55-year journey, and meeting his dad has been a “fabulous” experience for him.

“I was very excited, couldn’t hardly wait,” Thompson says. “It’s been 55 years in the making.”

Griffith expresses a similar sentiment, saying it’s been “enlightening” to learn about Thompson’s family and upbringing. He’s delighted to discover, “I have a great son.”

Griffith started on this journey about three years ago. His daughter gave him a DNA testing kit for Christmas, but he doesn’t remember what sparked his daughter’s interest in it.

It wasn’t something he paid much attention to at first because he had no idea he had a son.

Griffith says he had a brief relationship with a woman more than 50 years ago when he was serving in Vietnam. They parted ways soon after their introduction and moved forward with life.

Not long into his DNA search, he started getting messages from distant relatives, including one from Thompson.

“At first, I checked with my daughter. I said, ‘This couldn’t be a scam could it? I don’t want to be scammed into getting a hold of somebody (I’m not even related to),’” Griffith recalls.

When he read the message from Thompson, Griffith says he was “floored.”

“I had no idea there was someone out there that could be my son or daughter,” says Griffith. “I was pretty much floored.”

Thompson grew up in Twin Falls and was adopted shortly after birth. Learning who his biological parents are has been a lifelong dream. That led him to pursue answers through DNA testing, which he started a few years before Griffith. It led to his initial contact with Griffith.

“Six months to a year later, we finally got on the phone together,” Thompson says. “I was overjoyed and excited (to hear my dad’s voice for the first time).”

Over the last six days, Thompson says the flow of conversation has felt natural. The pair have learned a lot about each other and discovered similar traits, mannerisms and interests.

“We have similar political likes and dislikes,” Griffith says. “One of the things I was afraid of is that we would be on the opposite end (politically), but come to find out we’re pretty similar (in that area).”

Accompanying Griffith on the trip to Idaho is his daughter, Courtney, and his brother, John, along with Beth Gilmer, Griffith’s niece, and her husband, Barry. They’ve enjoyed getting acquainted with Thompson’s family as well. Thompson is grateful for the connections he’s made with other family members.

Griffith has also enjoyed meeting his grandson for the first time. Thompson’s 15-year-old son, Max, wasn’t home during EastIdahoNews.com’s conversation with the family, but Thompson says it’s been a joyful experience for Max to become acquainted with his grandpa.

Griffith is headed back to Ohio on Thursday, but he’s enjoyed every moment of his time in Twin Falls and the duo plan to stay in touch.

“I’m going to get him (Thompson) into Dayton and we’ll show him where I grew up, where our family grew up and go from there,” says Griffith.

Thompson says he’s looking forward to the trip sometime next year.

“It’s been wonderful and fabulous and I couldn’t ask for anything more,” says Thompson. “It’s been a lifelong dream of mine and it’s finally here.”

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Crash may leave 4-year-old paralyzed years after recovering from paralysis as an infant

By Kaitlyn Hart, EastIdahoNews.com

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    REXBURG, Idaho (eastidahonews.com) — Four-year-old Carter Grover has persevered through more than most adults will in their entire lives.

At seven months old, Carter contracted a virus as a complication from COVID-19, which caused him to become paralyzed from the neck down.

“He had contracted COVID from the daycare that he was at, which caused him to get this virus called transverse myelitis,” says Katherine Grover, Carter’s mom. “We had miraculously made an almost full recovery from that.”

According to the Mayo Clinic, transverse myelitis is a neurological disorder that results in inflammation of both sides of one section of the spinal cord. This can cause pain, muscle weakness, sensory problems, bladder and bowel dysfunction, and paralysis.

“We did a lot of physical therapy three times a week, and occupational therapy every week. It’s been a wild ride. He just started walking again in April of 2024 last year. He was walking again and quickly learned how to run,” Grover says. “Every three months we would go to Lehi, Utah, down to the new Primary Children’s Clinic, which is incredible, to get Botox shots in his joints to keep him from stiffening up.”

Even through the rollercoaster of health setbacks, Grover says Carter is a loving, funny, and energetic kid.

“Carter is just so happy to be alive. He’s got a little attitude of course, but who doesn’t these days? He loves dancing, he loves music, he loves all animals,” Grover says. “He’s just so playful and happy, and he always needs to be right there with me in everything that I do.”

On Sept. 22, Carter’s grandmother, Laurie Peterson, was driving him to his physical therapy appointment, which he goes to three times a week in Rexburg, when she suffered a medical emergency while driving near the intersection on Salem Road at 3000 North.

“She suffered a stroke that led to her being unable to stop properly at the stop sign and was hit by another oncoming vehicle. It did, unfortunately, involve a hay-baler,” Grover says. “We do feel like the vehicle rolled, but we aren’t sure. They were both wearing seatbelts at the time.”

Six people were transported to the hospital, including Carter and his grandmother.

Grover was at Costco when she received the call from law enforcement, learning that her mother and son had been in a serious car crash and were both unconscious at the scene.

“They were rushed to EIRMC in Idaho Falls, and somehow (Peterson) had become coherent enough to give them my name and phone number,” Grover says. “Shortly after that, she crashed and had to be intubated.”

Shortly after being rushed to EIRMC, Carter was life-flighted to Primary Children’s Hospital in Salt Lake City.

“The accident caused a spinal cord tear in the C1 and C2 of (Carter’s) spine, and his C5 and C6 were also damaged,” Grover explains. “Due to the severity of the spinal cord tear, it has left Carter paralyzed from the neck down, and he is unable to breathe on his own.”

According to Katherine, doctors have given Carter a difficult prognosis. Still, the family says they are choosing to keep hope alive.

“The chances of him being able to walk again and breathe on his own again are pretty slim,” Grover says. “But, he is extremely cognizant of his brain. Activity is excellent, and he is awake, and he is communicating with me and the nurses and doctors with his eyes.”

Grover says she has been staying with Carter in Utah, while her sister, Emily Gonzales, has been with their mother, as she is in critical condition in the ICU at EIRMC.

Gonzales says Peterson has suffered multiple strokes and is not “out of the woods yet.”

“Unfortunately, she did suffer multiple strokes, and those were on the left side of her brain,” Gonzales says. “She’s got a long road of recovery as well. She has two broken collar bones, a fractured sternum, broken ribs, fractured pelvis, a laceration to her spleen, and two pneumothoraxes, so she’s got holes in each lung.”

Despite all the challenges, the sisters say that the community’s support has been overwhelming, and they have been flooded with help from family and friends.

“I am just so humbled and honored to have such amazing and incredible people in my life,” Grover says. “Carter’s preschool came, they made him pictures and a big poster that everybody signed and drew on. And they brought a bunch of books and they brought Carter’s favorite stuffed lion.”

Gonzales, who owns The Neighborhood Barber in Idaho Falls, says she was recently grateful to learn that her coworkers had planned a fundraiser for Carter titled “Cuts for Carter.”

“My team has just been so incredibly amazing, and they want to help and support,” Gonzales says. “They started a cut-a-thon that they’re hosting at my shop on Oct. 11th, and all the proceeds they get from that day are going to be donated towards Carter’s recovery and to help my sister out with whatever she needs while she’s in Utah.”

Gonzales also started a GoFundMe to raise money for Carter’s medical treatment, recovery, and other expenses while the family is in Utah.

“Carter has really surprised so many doctors and has overcome every challenge that he has been faced with,” Gonzales says. “As he’s grown older, he just keeps proving doctors, and everybody wrong.”

Grover says she wants the community to know that her mother is strong and an inspiration to the family, which keeps them believing that she will fully recover.

“She’s an amazing woman. She raised three kids by herself, holding down a full-time job,” Grover says. “We are fortunate enough to have my mother so active in our lives, and my children are blessed because we have her.”

Despite the hardship their family is facing, Grover says a favorite saying of Carter’s continues to come to mind and provides her with comfort.

“Carter is so strong-minded, and he’s going to get through this, too,” Grover says. “One of Carter’s sayings that he always says to me every day is, ‘You’re my favorite heart.’”

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