Senator Ruben Gallego hosts mobile hours at Yuma City Hall

Eduardo Morales

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – U.S. Senator Ruben Gallego from Arizona hosted mobile office hours Thursday at Yuma City Hall.

The senator’s Constituent Service Team was there in person to hear and help Yuma locals in need. They focused on helping Arizonans navigate services like VA benefits, Social Security, the IRS, and immigration services. 

Gallego says that despite the shutdown, he recognizes Arizonans are still facing challenges and would like to help.

“To hear from the actual people from their mouth directly is what really matters, so we’re here to listen, try to help folks where we can, and to direct them somewhere else when we might not be able to get them the direct answer they need right away,” said Zak Royse, the Southern Arizona Director in Sen. Gallego’s office.

Deb Chinn is a Yuma local who came down to talk to Gallego’s team looking for help on getting VA disability benefits for her husband.

“He has cancer that is not in remission, and we’re being killed by copays and things with the VA,” she explained.

Chinn shares how it feels to have someone hear them out.

“I like to know that people hear us, I mean, right now, we don’t have representation because Adelita has not been signed in yet, so anybody that we can get to hear us is a good thing,” she says.

Emiliano Rodriguez, another local, shares that although he did not vote for Gallego he likes what he is doing.

“That’s what the Senator and Representative should do, come down to the local area, and hear the people’s voice, and take back their ideas and take what they have heard and put it together in law or whatever they have to do you know,” Rodriguez says.

The event took place from noon to 3:00 p.m., and around 25 people RSVP’d for the event.

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Prop 50 passes with low turnout in Imperial County

Adrik Vargas

IMPERIAL COUNTY, Calif. (KYMA) – California voters have approved Proposition 50 in Tuesday’s special election, a measure introduced in response to recent redistricting efforts in Texas.

In Imperial County, Elections Coordinator Francisco Badilla said voter turnout so far sits at 14.76%, out of nearly 95,000 registered voters.

“We still have a lot to account for,” Badilla said, noting that ballots are still being processed.

So far, about 60% of votes counted in Imperial County are in favor of Prop 50. Despite the quick turnaround to organize the election, Badilla said the process went smoothly.

“I feel like it was very smooth. Didn’t have any problems at the precincts or drop boxes,” he said.

With Prop 50 passing, California will now update its congressional voting maps, changing how districts are grouped for future elections.

Some Imperial County residents said they felt well-informed heading to the polls.

“I think people are pretty knowledgeable,” said voter Cynthia Jimenez. “I’ve seen it on social media, billboards, and signs everywhere.”

Badilla said final numbers won’t be available until all ballots, including those received by mail, are processed.

“We have to account for everything that happened on Election Day and process everything that comes in through the mail,” he said.

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Rising demand threatens Imperial Valley Food Bank supplies

Adrik Vargas

IMPERIAL COUNTY, Calif. (KYMA) – Federal furloughs and cuts to food aid are leaving more families across the country turning to food banks, and the Imperial Valley is no exception.

The region already struggles with one of California’s highest rates of food insecurity, and the recent halt in SNAP benefits and furlough of federal employees has only increased the need.

John Reed, Director of Operations at the Imperial Valley Food Bank, said, “We’ve been seeing anywhere from 60, 80 to 100 people a day coming in asking for assistance.”

The food bank has helped nearly 200 furloughed federal workers and their families, but Reed noted that lost federal funding has made it harder to keep up with demand.

“Food banks in general lost federal funding which then meant less food that could be distributed to people seeking food assistance,” he said.

In October, the food bank served hundreds of more families than the previous month, rising from 6,697 to 7,816. The organization also handed out an additional 300,000 pounds of food.

Reed stressed the importance of community support, saying, “That is why we are requesting assistance from the community in form of donations so that doesn’t happen.”

He cautioned that if supplies run low, the amount of food available per family could be reduced.

Volunteers are also crucial to keeping the food bank running. Norma Garcia said helping her community felt like a calling.

“Since there’s a lot of need right now, like with people losing their snaps, there’s so many families with kids and they need sustenance. Come and help…it’s really important,” she said.

The Imperial Valley Food Bank says it is prepared to continue serving the growing number of families in need but emphasizes that donations and volunteers are vital to maintaining its programs.

You can head to the Imperial Valley Food Bank’s website to learn how you can donate or volunteer.

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Versailles motorcyclist killed in Camden County crash with SUV

Haley Swaino

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 19-year-old Versailles woman was killed in a crash on Friday evening in Camden County, according to a crash report from the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

The crash happened on South Route 5 at Dry Hollow Road just before 5 p.m.

The report says that the woman was riding a 2025 Kawasaki Ninja 500 northbound on Route 5 when a 2011 Honda CR-V, driven by an 82-year-old woman from Camdenton, started to make a left turn onto the roadway from Dry Hollow Road.

The SUV crossed the path of the motorcycle, and the bike crashed into it.

The motorcyclist was pronounced dead at 6:14 p.m. by a Camden County Medical Examiner, the report says. She was wearing a helmet.

The driver of the SUV went to Lake Regional Hospital with minor injuries.

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Columbia man seriously injured in Boone County crash

Marie Moyer

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 40-year-old man was taken to University Hospital in Columbia Friday evening with serious injuries after a crash on Route 763, according to a crash report from the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

The report says that around 8:15 p.m. Friday, a 2012 Lincoln MKS driven by a 40-year-old Columbia man was heading southbound, just north of East Harvester Road. The man tried to turn left and drove off the road.

The car then hit a concrete curb and collided with a metal pole. The car overturned, hitting a utility pole and several wooden palettes, before coming to a stop on its side.

The report says the driver was not wearing a seatbelt.

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San Mateo police arrest driver after finding machine gun during traffic stop

By Jose Fabian

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    SAN FRANCISCO (KPIX) — San Mateo police said an 18-year-old was arrested after officers found a machine gun and drugs during a traffic stop on Friday.

Officers pulled over a vehicle for having an expired registration and illegal window tint around 1:37 p.m., near Delaware Street and 25th Avenue, police said.

When they approached the driver, police said officers noticed an open tequila bottle and the smell of marijuana. They then searched the vehicle with probable cause and allegedly found a Glock pistol with a multi-burst trigger and an extended magazine. Police said the gun also had a bullet in the chamber.

The gun was found in a black backpack alongside two scales, psilocybin mushrooms, 17 oxycodone pills and marijuana, police said.

Officers arrested the suspect and identified him as 18-year-old Carron Patterson, of Belmont.

Patterson was arrested on suspicion of the following charges and booked into the San Mateo County Jail:

converting a firearm to a machine gun possession of a controlled substance while armed carrying a concealed firearm within a vehicle possession of an unconventional pistol possession of a multi-burst trigger carrying a loaded firearm in public under specific circumstances possession of a machine gun possession of marijuana for sale possession of a loaded, concealed firearm

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New LEDs on K Street bring color and energy to Downtown Sacramento

By James Taylor

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    SACRAMENTO (KOVR) — Thousands of people were downtown Friday night for the Kings game and the opening weekend of the ice skating rink. Many got their first look at the new glow shining from the overhead lights along K Street.

A six-block-long stretch between the Golden 1 Center and the SAFE Credit Union Convention Center is now shining with more than 6,000 new LEDs.

“It is going to feel unlike any other part of the city,” said Scott Ford, deputy director of the Downtown Sacramento Partnership. “It is going to be vibrant, lit up.”

Ford said the lights are computer-controlled and can glow nearly any color.

“There are limitless possibilities, and it’s always going to be a changing personality and very unique to K Street,” Ford said.

During Kings games, the lights will display a rotating purple hue, and if the Kings win, they change to a special victory pattern.

The lights are mounted on more than three dozen poles, each with 168 bright diodes.

Julie Audell’s family came downtown to go ice skating, and they liked the lights so much that they decided to take their family Christmas photo there.

“When we got here, we said, ‘Oh, we should do it in front of these lights. They’re so pretty,’ ” she said.

The downtown partnership says the lights also help provide extra security and they create brighter conditions for bicyclists and pedestrians who use K Street at night.

“It’s about creating a clean, safe, welcoming space because people fundamentally are drawn to that,” Ford said. “We really want this to be a healthy, vibrant, active part of California’s capital city.”

The colorful LED light show remains active until 2 a.m., when the lights turn bright white to signal that the bars are restaurants are closing.

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Naked trespasser shot and killed after attacking Studio City residents

By Joy Benedict

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    LOS ANGELES (KCAL, KCBS) — A Vietnam War veteran shot and killed a naked man who broke into a Studio City home Friday morning.

The Los Angeles Police Department said investigators believe the suspect drove to the neighborhood on Tujunga Avenue, took off his clothes on the sidewalk and then started inexplicably screaming.

LAPD Capt. Warner Castillo said the suspect picked up signs before breaking into a woman’s home. Castillo added that the suspect chased her into the street at the same time that her neighbor, a 79-year-old Vietnam War Veteran, ran out of his home to help her.

“He tells the suspect to leave, warns him that he has a gun,” Castillo said. “Grabs the 79-year-old man, lifts him up and throws him on the ground.”

Despite breaking both of his legs in the attack, police said the veteran continued to fight back.

“As he’s on the ground, the suspect approaches him and tries to pick him up again,” Castillo said. “The 79-year-old man subsequently shoots the suspect three times.”

The veteran was taken to the hospital after killing the naked man.

“Hopefully, he makes it out of here without being in a wheelchair for the rest of his life,” Castillo said.

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A man in Colorado who tried to self deport still being held at an immigration detention facility, months later

By Alan Gionet

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    COLORADO (KCNC) — A man of Laotian descent in Colorado remains at the ICE detention facility in the Denver metro area awaiting deportation that he’s not fighting. In fact, he’s asking for it.

Keooudone Phetchamphone, who has been under a deportation order since 2010, has informed authorities he wants to go back to Laos. But the family of the 56 year old claims Immigration and Customs Enforcement has been slow in getting the process moving, and “Don,” as he is known to family, has missed two flights that have taken deported people to Laos.

“I thought my brother would just be checked in, six weeks later he would just be gone and back to Laos to start his life. And it is not happening that way,” said Don’s sister Pathoumma Phetchamphone.

Instead, more than two months have passed and her brother, who was taken into custody at a yearly check-in, remains at the ICE facility in Aurora.

“We’re not slow rolling getting him out of here,” said an ICE spokesman in response to the family’s allegations.

Keooudone, his sister, another brother and parents came to the United States as refugees in 1979. That followed five years at a refugee camp awaiting a sponsor to come to the U.S. Their father had helped American military forces during the U.S. war in Vietnam, which also edged over at times into Laos and Cambodia. Keooudone’s sister, who goes by “Pat,” excelled, getting a law degree and going into real estate and mortgages. Keooudone, who goes by “Don,” had trouble.

“I think he had a harder time, acclimating than oldest brother and I,” said Pat. “(He) ended up just hanging out with the wrong people and doing the wrong things,” she explained.

Between 2003 and 2007, Don was arrested on a list of charges including assault, drug possession, weapons possession, domestic violence and harassment. There was time behind bars. In 2010, he was taken into custody by immigration authorities and ultimately a deportation order was entered. Law required that anyone under that order must be deported within six months, or be freed from immigration custody. The United States had no diplomatic agreement on deportation with Laos, a communist country, so he could not be deported and was freed. Don was then under an order of supervision and told to check-in yearly. His sister says he could not get a passport from the U.S. or Laos, or permission from Laos to depart.

His family says he began to change. Don was moved to help the Lao Buddhist Temple in Westminster rebuild after it was hit by fire in 2011.

“He has gone there for the past 14 year(s) with his blood, sweat, tears and thousands and thousands of dollars and poured that into that temple which is now 80% or 90% done,” said his sister. “I mean if he hasn’t done anything for that long, I think he’s a changed man.”

Don has been working for his sister and brother and at a property he manages for them. He also has been instrumental in helping other refugee families.

“Mr. Don was the first person who extended a helping hand. He patiently taught us how to use basic household appliances, cook safely, shop for groceries and pay bills. He guided us through every step of adapting to life in America,” wrote Durga Niroula, a Nepalese refugee.

There was an additional misdemeanor charge in 2013 in connection with an alleged hit and run involving an unoccupied vehicle, but otherwise, Don’s record in Colorado shows no additional arrests or citations in the past dozen years.

This year, he decided he would try to self-deport to Laos.

“He had a feeling that something was going to be different during the administration and so he wanted to go back,” said Pat.

Family and supporters backed him up, even holding a deportation party at the temple in mid-August. Don was scheduled to check-in with ICE Aug. 27.

“We hired attorneys to tell ICE that he wanted to go back to Laos. Our attorney gave them a week’s notice. Told them of our intent. We brought the application to the ICE check-in.” Don was arrested at his check-in and held by ICE.

Citing Don’s rap sheet, a spokesman for ICE said, “What I see here was this was somebody who had no intention of going back to Laos until he got arrested.”

But family says ICE had been informed. The ICE spokesman followed with an emailed statement, “If Phetchamphone was so intent on returning to Laos on his own he could have done so in the 15 years since the removal order was issued by the immigration judge.” But in the same statement, addressing the question of why he has yet to be deported by ICE after being in custody since late August, the statement said, “ICE must receive his travel documents from the government of Laos before his removal can be effectuated.”

Pat, who activated her law license in order to represent her brother, says ICE has been slow and even resistant when it comes to allowing her brother to sign paperwork necessary to say he will not challenge deportation. The family filed with the government of Laos mid-year to gain Don permission to return. Pat says that permission came through in October, but the government of Laos will only issue it to ICE with her brother in custody. Pat claims delays in ICE processing Don’s paperwork has led to no receipt of the proper approval.

“I don’t understand why taxpayers have to sit here and litigate and defend a case where a person wants to go home,” said Pat.

“The notion that ICE is somehow delaying Phetchamphone’s removal is laughable at best,” said the ICE statement.

The family is offering to pay for his flight back to Laos, rather than have him shipped on a cargo plane with other deportees. Pat says they are willing to compensate the government for the cost of an ICE agent to go with him if necessary. But ICE says due to his “extensive criminal history,” he is not eligible for a voluntary removal program.

Keooudone Phetchamphone remains in ICE custody. Pat says his health has grown worse and they are concerned about the medical care he is getting in the facility run by contractor Geo Group. She says the family plans to help him open an orphanage in Laos in the name of their parents when he does get back to his native country.

“He’s moved on, but it seems like ICE won’t let him move on. So he just wants a fresh start,” said Pat.

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Twin Cities man accused of swindling thousands from customers seeking tree care services

By WCCO Staff

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    MINNESOTA (WCCO) — A man from Burnsville, Minnesota, is accused of scamming thousands of dollar from more than a dozen Twin Cities residents who sought his tree care services.

The 44-year-old man was charged in Dakota County earlier this week with two counts of felony theft by swindle in connection to 13 reported cases between Aug. 1, 2024, and Nov. 1 of this year.

According to the criminal complaint, the Burnsville Police Department started investigating the defendant in August “for tree care services that were only partially or never completed.”

Five of the 13 victims reside in Burnsville, while the other eight live in Apple Valley, Eagan, Inver Grove Heights, Lakeville, Prior Lake and Savage. The total amount he’s accused of stealing is more than $17,000.

Court documents show patterns of the defendant’s alleged misconduct include making excuses for why the work was never completed, refusal to issue full or partial refunds and subsequently blocking customers’ phone numbers.

He faces up to a decade in prison if convicted.

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