City of Yuma to host 2026 Neighborhood Leadership Academy

Dillon Fuhrman

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – The City of Yuma is inviting residents to apply for the 2026 Neighborhood Leadership Academy.

According to a press release, it is a 12-week in-depth course where residents get a behind the scenes look at different functions, departments, services and facilities in the City of Yuma.

The City says the academy starts January 15, 2026, and the graduation ceremony is taking place April 9, 2026.

The event is free, and applications will remain open “until the academy reaches its 25-person capacity,” according to the City.

If anyone wants to apply to participate in the academy, click here. To learn more about the academy, click here.

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Woman gunned down by ex after leaving work identified

By Ontaria Woods, Cody Alcorn, and Jonathan Raymond

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    GWINNETT COUNTY, Georgia (WXIA) — The victim who was shot and killed Friday just moments after leaving work at a shopping center in Gwinnett County has been identified as a 21-year-old woman.

The suspect — whom police say was located in Columbia County, Georgia and died of a self-inflicted gunshot after a brief chase and PIT maneuver — has also been identified as a 23-year-old man.

According to an update from the Gwinnett County Police Department, the victim, Elaijia Whitley, had previously been in a relationship with the suspect, Caprice Hudson.

The tragic killing happened Friday afternoon just minutes after Whitley left work at a plasma donation center in the Duluth area. The shooting happened in the parking lot of the Promenade at Pleasant Hill shopping center on Pleasant Hill Road.

Police described the crime at the time as a “domestic-related homicide.”

Coworkers who didn’t want to be identified said the victim had just left work and was planning to give another coworker a ride home when someone pulled up, opened her car door, and shot her.

One woman who knew the victim but didn’t want to be identified told 11Alive the violence hit close to home.

“This is a crazy, senseless situation,” she said. “You shouldn’t have to worry about if I leave work or go here, am I gonna make it back? Nothing in the world is that deep to where someone has to lose their life over it.”

BioLife closed for the remainder of the day as employees grieved the loss of their coworker.

On Friday evening, the company released the following statement:

“We are aware of the incident that occurred earlier today outside our Duluth center. We are deeply saddened by the tragic loss of life and extend our heartfelt condolences to the families, friends, and loved ones who have been affected. Law enforcement is investigating, and we are cooperating fully with their investigation.

BioLife is not able to share any additional information at this time. The center is currently closed and will remain closed until further notice.”

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Woman sits in car for 14 hours to get food during church food giveaway

By Chase Houle

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    STONECREST, Georgia (WXIA) — Thousands of people lined the streets, sitting in their cars for hours in order to receive a box of food during the New Birth Baptist Church food giveaway on Sunday morning.

One woman had been in her car for 14 hours in the hopes of being one of the families to receive free groceries.

“We got here about 7:30 p.m.,” said Lasheika Carter. “With the government shutdown and hardships on a lot of families, we just have to do what we have to do to make sure we have what we need,” said Carter.

Carter was joined by more than 2,000 other families going through a similar situation, like Kerry Ruffin. Ruffin served in the military for eight years and is on a fixed income since retiring. He says he relies on SNAP to help with groceries.

“Why in the world do we have to sit here trying to get us some food for us to be able to eat,” said Ruffin. “At least some people care about other people, and the fact what these people are doing are doing a great job being able to try and help people find something to eat.”

Some of those people were the 500 volunteers who were loading the food into the back of people’s cars. Like 10-year-old Madison Morris.

“It’s important to me because people who are not in my shoes or people who have situations going on, I can help comfort them and feel more confident and not feel stuck up because of their situations,” said Morris.

And the need was so great that people had to be turned away because there was no more food left. But Carter, along with her daughter, were able to get themselves a box.

“Don’t lose your faith, keep your hope in God and keep praying, keep pushing, and He’s going to make a way because Psalm 23 said, “The Lord is my Shepard and I shall not want,” So, he will meet every need,” said Carter.

Carter says the box of groceries will help take the edge off and will put a plate on her table for her birthday.

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YFD introduces support vehicle to assist their ladder company

Danyelle Burke North

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – The Yuma Fire Department (YFD) unveiled Ladder Tender 1, which they say is a specialized support vehicle designed to assist their ladder company “while improving operational efficiency and safety.”

According to YFD, the vehicle carries the same tools and equipment found on a traditional ladder truck, like ventilation saws, forcible entry tools, lighting and medical supplies. However, it does not include an aerial ladder.

Courtesy: Yuma Fire Department

Courtesy: Yuma Fire Department

YFD says this is to allow their ladder company to respond to lower-risk calls like medical assists, alarms and public service incidents.

YFD also says they will use the aerial ladder truck to respond to structure fires, rescues and other major emergencies.

Courtesy: Yuma Fire Department

In addition, this will help YFD minimize fuel consumption and enhance overall response capabilities while demonstrating their commitment to operational efficiency, fiscal responsibility and community safety.

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

037 Ladder Tender IntroDownload

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Dick Cheney, influential Republican vice president to George W. Bush, dies

CNN

CNN

By Stephen Collinson, Veronica Stracqualursi, CNN

(CNN) — Dick Cheney, America’s most powerful modern vice president and chief architect of the “war on terror,” who helped lead the country into the ill-fated Iraq war on faulty assumptions, has died, according to a statement from his family. He was 84.

“His beloved wife of 61 years, Lynne, his daughters, Liz and Mary, and other family members were with him as he passed,” the family said, adding that he died due to complications of pneumonia and cardiac and vascular disease.

“Dick Cheney was a great and good man who taught his children and grandchildren to love our country, and to live lives of courage, honor, love, kindness, and fly fishing,” the family added.

“We are grateful beyond measure for all Dick Cheney did for our country. And we are blessed beyond measure to have loved and been loved by this noble giant of a man.”

The 46th vice president, who served alongside Republican President George W. Bush for two terms between 2001 and 2009, was for decades a towering and polarizing Washington power player.

Bush described Cheney in a statement Tuesday as a “decent, honorable man.” “History will remember him as among the finest public servants of his generation – a patriot who brought integrity, high intelligence, and seriousness of purpose to every position,” Bush said.

In his final years, Cheney, still a hardline conservative, nevertheless became largely ostracized from his party over his intense criticism of President Donald Trump whom he branded a “coward” and the greatest-ever threat to the republic.

In an ironic coda to a storied political career, he cast his final vote in a presidential election in 2024 for a liberal Democrat, and fellow member of the vice president’s club, Kamala Harris, in a reflection of how the populist GOP had turned against his traditional conservatism.

Cheney was plagued by cardiovascular disease for most of his adult life, surviving a series of heart attacks, to lead a full, vigorous life and lived many years in retirement after a heart transplant in 2012 that he hailed in a 2014 interview as “the gift of life itself.”

Cheney, a sardonic former Wyoming representative, White House chief of staff and defense secretary, was enjoying a lucrative career in the corporate world when he was charged by George W. Bush with vetting potential vice-presidential nominees. The quest ended with Cheney himself taking the oath of office as a worldly number two to a callow new president who arrived in the Oval Office after a disputed election.

While caricatures of Cheney as the real president do not accurately capture the true dynamics of Bush’s inner circle, he relished the enormous influence that he wielded from behind the scenes.

Cheney was in the White House, with the president out of town on the crisp, clear morning of September 11, 2001. In the split second of horror when a second hijacked plane hit the World Trade Center in New York, he said he became a changed man, determined to avenge the al Qaeda-orchestrated attacks and to enforce US power throughout the Middle East with a neo-conservative doctrine of regime change and pre-emptive war.

“At that moment, you knew this was a deliberate act. This was a terrorist act,” he recalled of that day in an interview with CNN’s John King in 2002.

Cheney reflected in later years on how the attacks left him with overwhelming sense of responsibility to ensure such an assault on the homeland never happened again. Perceptions however that he was the sole driving force behind the war on terror and US ventures into Iraq and Afghanistan are misleading.

Contemporary and historic accounts of the administration show that Bush was his own self-styled “The Decider.”

Multiple former presidents paid tribute to Cheney on Tuesday, with Bill Clinton and Joe Biden highlighting the former vice president’s “public service.”

A changed man

From a bunker deep below the White House, Cheney went into crisis mode, directing the response of a grief-stricken nation suddenly at war. He gave the extraordinary order to authorize the shooting down of any more hijacked airliners in the event they were headed to the White House or the US Capitol building. For many, his frequent departures to “undisclosed” locations outside Washington to preserve the presidential chain of succession reinforced his image as an omnipotent figure waging covert war from the shadows. His hawkishness and alarmist view of a nation facing grave threats was not an outlier at the time – especially during a traumatic period that included anthrax mailings and sniper shootings around Washington, DC, that exacerbated a sense of public fear even though they were unrelated to 9/11.

The September 11 attacks unleashed the US war in Afghanistan to overthrow the Taliban, which was harboring al Qaeda, though the terror group’s leader Osama bin Laden escaped. Soon, Cheney was agitating for widening the US assault to Iraq and its leader, Saddam Hussein, whose forces he had helped to eject from Kuwait in the first Gulf War as President George H.W. Bush’s Pentagon chief.

The vice president’s aggressive warnings about Iraq’s supposed weapons of mass destruction programs, alleged links to al Qaeda and intent to furnish terrorists with deadly weapons to attack the United States played a huge role in laying the groundwork for the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. Congressional reports and other post-war inquiries later showed that Cheney and other administration officials exaggerated, misrepresented or did not properly portray faulty intelligence about weapons of mass destruction programs that Iraq turned out not to possess. One of Cheney’s most infamous claims, that the chief 9/11 hijacker Mohamed Atta, met Iraqi intelligence officials in Prague, was never substantiated, including by the independent commission into the September 11 attacks.

But Cheney insisted in 2005 that he and other top officials were acting on “the best available intelligence,” at the time.

While admitting that the flaws in the intelligence were plain in hindsight, he insisted that any claim that the data was “distorted, hyped, or fabricated” was “utterly false.”

The conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan also led the US down a dark legal and moral path including “enhanced interrogations” of terror suspects that critics blasted as torture. But Cheney – who was at the center of every facet of the global war on terrorism – insisted methods like waterboarding were perfectly acceptable. Cheney was also an outspoken advocate for holding terror suspects without trial at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba – a practice that critics at home and abroad branded an affront to core American values.

No regrets

Cheney became a symbol of the excesses of the anti-terror campaigns and the fatally false premises and poor planning that turned the initially successful invasion of Iraq into a bloody quagmire. He left office reviled by Democrats and with an approval rating of 31%, according to the Pew Research Center.

To the end of his life, Cheney expressed no regrets, certain he had merely done what was necessary to respond to an unprecedented attack on the US mainland that killed nearly 3,000 people and led to nearly two decades of foreign wars that divided the nation and transformed its politics.

“I would do it again in a minute,” Cheney said, when confronted by a Senate Intelligence Committee report in 2014 that concluded enhanced interrogation methods as brutal and ineffective and responsible for damaging US standing in the eyes of the world.

Of the Iraq war, he told CNN in 2015: “It was the right thing to do then. I believed it then and I believe it now.”

‘He’s a coward’

Cheney’s aggressive anti-terror policies fit into a personal doctrine that justified extraordinary presidential powers with limited congressional oversight. That was in line with his belief that the authority of the executive branch had been mistakenly eroded in the aftermath of the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal that led to the resignation of his first presidential boss, President Richard Nixon.

Yet in his final years, Cheney emerged as a fierce critic of a man who had an even more expansive view of the powers of the presidency than he did – Trump. Cheney had supported Trump in 2016 despite his criticism of Bush-Cheney foreign policies and his transformation of the party of Reagan into a populist, nationalist GOP. But the ending of the president’s first term, when his refusal to accept his 2020 election defeat led to the January 6 insurrection, caused Cheney to speak out, in a rare, public manner.

The former vice president’s daughter, then-Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, meanwhile, sacrificed a promising career in the GOP to oppose Trump after his attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election and the US Capitol insurrection on January 6, 2021. In an ad for his daughter’s unsuccessful campaign to fight off a pro-Trump candidate’s primary challenge in 2022, Dick Cheney – who was, by then, rarely seen in public – looked directly into the camera from under a wide brimmed cowboy hat and delivered an extraordinary direct message.

“In our nation’s 246-year history, there has never been an individual who is a greater threat to our republic than Donald Trump,” Cheney said.

“He is a coward. A real man wouldn’t lie to his supporters. He lost his election, and he lost big. I know it. He knows it, and deep down, I think most Republicans know.”

Early days out West

Richard Bruce Cheney was born January 30, 1941, in Lincoln, Nebraska. While living in the small mountain town of Casper, Wyoming, he met his high school sweetheart and future wife Lynne Vincent. Cheney was accepted to Yale University on a scholarship, but he struggled to fit in and maintain his grades. By his own admission, he was kicked out.

He returned West to work on power lines and was twice arrested for driving under the influence. In a turning point for Cheney, he was given an ultimatum from Lynne, who had “made it clear she wasn’t interested in marrying a lineman for the county,” he told The New Yorker. “I buckled down and applied myself. Decided it was time to make something of myself,” he told the magazine.

Cheney went back to school and earned a bachelor’s and master’s in political science from University of Wyoming. The couple was married in 1964.

Cheney is survived by Lynne, his daughters Liz and Mary Cheney and seven grandchildren.

A veteran Washington power broker

Cheney began honing his inside power game – at which he became a master – as an aide to Nixon.

He was later picked by Donald Rumsfeld as his deputy White House chief of staff under President Gerald Ford and then succeeded his mentor and close friend in the job in 1975 when Rumsfeld departed to become defense secretary. Cheney was instrumental in reviving their partnership in 2001 when he recalled Rumsfeld from the political wilderness to return to the Pentagon.

The pair formed an extraordinary backroom alliance in the Bush administration throughout the war on terror and the Iraq war – much to the frustration of more moderate members of the administration including then-Secretary of State Colin Powell and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice – who took over from Powell in the second term.

While Democratic President Jimmy Carter was in the White House, Cheney decided to run for Congress and was elected to Wyoming’s sole US House seat in 1978. Cheney served six terms, rising to become House minority whip, and racked up a very conservative voting record.

In 1989, President George H. W. Bush, who had served with Cheney in the Ford administration, tapped him to serve as his defense secretary, calling him a “trusted friend, adviser.” He was confirmed by the Senate in a 92-0 vote.

As Pentagon chief, Cheney showed considerable skill in directing the US invasion of Panama in 1989 and Operation Desert Storm in 1991 to push Iraq’s troops out of Kuwait. Following his stint as defense secretary, Cheney briefly explored a run for president in the 1996 election cycle but decided against it.

During Clinton’s presidency, Cheney joined Dallas-based Halliburton Co. serving as its chief executive officer.

It wouldn’t be until the younger Bush decided to run for office that Cheney was chosen to lead the Republican candidate’s search for a running mate and, after initially turning down the job, ended up being added to the GOP ticket.

“During the process, I came to the conclusion that the selector was the best person to be selected,” Bush said in the 2020 CNN film “President in Waiting.”

Cheney brought a wealth of knowledge and experience to areas where critics complained Bush was weak. As a former Texas governor, Bush had no elected experience in Washington and little military and foreign policy background compared with Cheney.

Early in Bush’s presidency, Cheney led a task force to develop the administration’s energy policy and sought to keep its records secret in a fight that lasted Bush’s first term and went all the way to the US Supreme Court.

He was, however, at odds with Bush over the issue of same-sex marriage, saying that it should be left to the states to decide. In a 2004 town hall, he noted his daughter Mary’s sexual orientation reportedly for the first time publicly, according to The Washington Post. “With respect to the question of relationships, my general view is that freedom means freedom for everyone.People … ought to be free to enter into any kind of relationship they want to,” he said, the Post reported.

His relationship with Bush was complicated in later years, including by Bush’s refusal to pardon Cheney’s chief of staff Scooter Libby, who had been convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice in 2007 after a probe into who leaked the identity of a CIA operative. Libby was eventually pardoned by Trump in 2018.

In one of the most notorious moments in his personal life, which added to his grizzled legend in 2006, Cheney accidentally shot a hunting partner in the face with birdshot, causing relatively minor wounds.

Health issues

Cheney’s health issues began in 1978, when he had his first heart attack at age 37 while running for Congress. Three more followed in 1984, 1988 and November 2000, just a few days into the Florida presidential ballot recount that resulted in a Bush-Cheney win.

Cheney at the time said that he’d be the “the first to step down” if he learned he’d be unable to do the job and had a resignation letter in case he was deemed incapacitated.Cheney completed both terms under Bush, attending Barack Obama’s inauguration in January 2009 in a wheelchair.

A year after a fifth heart attack in 2010, Cheney received a heart pump that kept the organ running until his transplant in 2012.

Life after the White House

After leaving office, Cheney returned to private life, penning two memoirs — one about his personal and political career and the other about his struggles with heart disease as well as a book with his daughter, Liz. He became one of the most strident GOP critics of President Barack Obama, who had based his election campaign on promises to end the wars and other changes from what he called failed policies of the Bush-Cheney administration.

Years later, Cheney was decrying his own party — especially its leadership’s response to the attack on the Capitol — when he returned to the US Capitol with then-Rep. Liz Cheney on the one-year anniversary of January 6, 2021.

“I am deeply disappointed at the failure of many members of my party to recognize the grave nature of the January 6 attacks and the ongoing threat to our nation,” he said in a statement.

In a remarkable moment, Democrats lined up to greet the former Republican vice president and shake his hand. Former Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi hugged Cheney. The former vice president slammed Republican leaders in Congress, saying they do not resemble the leaders he remembered from his time in the body.

It was a scene that would have been unthinkable two decades earlier and an illustration of how the extraordinary changes in American politics wrought by Trump had made former bitter political foes find common cause in the fight for democracy.

“It’s not leadership that resembles any of the folks I knew when I was here for 10 years,” Cheney said at the Capitol in 2022.

Cheney continued his criticism of Trump in the following years and went as far as to endorse then-Vice President Kamala Harris, a Democrat and Trump’s opponent in the 2024 presidential campaign. He said he would vote for Harris because of the “duty to put country above partisanship to defend our Constitution.” Cheney emphasized his disdain for Trump at the time and warned that he “can never be trusted with power again,” though Trump would go on to win the presidency a couple of months later.

CNN’s Jamie Gangel and Shania Shelton contributed to this report.

This story has been updated with additional information.

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Veterans Day ceremony to be held at Bucklin Park

Marcos Icahuate

EL CENTRO, Calif. (KYMA) – An event will be held in El Centro for Veterans Day.

The City of El Centro, in collaboration with VFW Post 9305, will host a ceremony.

The ceremony is planned for Tuesday, November 11 at 11 a.m. at Bucklin Park Memorial Wall (1350 S. Eighth Street).

Veterans will be recognized for their courage and sacrifice for the United States.

Locals will gather to honor those who served in the U.S. Armed Forces.

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Elderly man found dead in Brawley after welfare check

Karina Bazarte

BRAWLEY, Calif. (KYMA) – An elderly man was found dead at a business in Brawley Monday morning.

The Brawley Police Department (BPD) says the body of the 87-year-old man was found inside a business on Main Street and North Palm Avenue.

Officers say they were flagged down by a local to do a welfare check.

“Once officers arrived at the location, officers looked through the window and they saw an elderly man laying on the floor. Officers made entry to the business and located an elderly man that was deceased,” said Sgt. David Pham of BPD.

Police do not don’t believe foul play was involved but are still waiting on the coroner’s offices for a full report.

This case is still under investigation.

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Pennsylvania man accused of threatening to kill Congress member arrested in Washington, D.C.

By Madeline Bartos

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    WASHINGTON (KDKA) — A Pennsylvania man was arrested in Washington, D.C., after Capitol police said he threatened to kill a member of Congress.

Capitol police said 43-year-old Richard Griffin from Pennsylvania was spotted by the Rapid Response Team around 12:30 p.m. Griffin was spotted from a “be on the lookout” bulletin that Capitol police said had been published by its Threat Assessment Section on Oct. 28.

Police said Griffin was stopped before he could try to go through security screening at the Delaware Avenue door of the Russell Senate Office Building. He was arrested for threats to do bodily harm.

“We will not tolerate any threats to the Members of Congress, their families, or staff,” United States Capitol Police Chief Michael Sullivan said in a news release. “Our officers, agents, and professional staff worked relentlessly to bring offenders to justice. We have a zero-tolerance stance when it comes to threats.”

Griffin has a history of emailing a Congressional office as well as other government officials and law enforcement agencies, police said.

“Today’s arrest is further evidence of the fact that our officers remain vigilant during this heightened threat environment,” Assistant Chief for Uniformed Operations Sean Gallagher said in a press release. “We are all proud of the work they do around the clock to keep the Congressional community safe.”

Police didn’t release any more information about Griffin.

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Giovanna Van Leeuwen
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AC unit catches fire in Yuma on South 11th Avenue

Danyelle Burke North

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – An air conditioning unit caught fire in a Yuma home, according to Yuma Fire Department (YFD).

On Monday, November 3, at about 9 a.m., firefighters were called about a mini split AC unit fire in the area of South 11th Avenue.

Crews found a single-family home with smoke coming from inside and all its residents were safely outside.

Firefighters determined an AC unit inside the home was the cause, as it could have mechanical failure, improper installation or high-resistance electrical connection, according to YFD.

No injuries were reported and its residents returned to the home.

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Preparing for votes on Prop 434 that looks to end San Luis City Council and mayor pay

Eduardo Morales

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – Voters in San Luis will be voting on several things in Tuesday’s election, including Proposition 434.

If Prop 434 is approved, the San Luis mayor and council members would serve the public without compensation, also without benefits and travel allowances.

As of last Friday, almost 3,400 out of 12,000 registered voters have cast their ballots in Yuma County. 

In-person voting for the elections at the Yuma County Recorder’s Office closed Monday at 5 p.m, but you can still drop off your ballot at a drop box location.

Yuma County Recorder David Lara explains why this election, although it may be smaller, is still important.

“The little elections are probably just as important or maybe even more than national elections because this is local control, whatever happens here and now, parents, the local community, this affects us directly here and now, that’s why it’s important,” says Lara.

On Tuesday, San Luis residents will be able to vote in-person at the San Luis Medical Mall and the Yuma County Library in San Luis.

Salvador Tinajero, a San Luis local, answers a crucial question ahead of the election.

“Why is it important to vote? Because if you don’t vote then, you don’t have a voice. You’re vote is what counts,” said Tinajero.

Yuma County Recorder David Lara gives some insight into Prop 434.

“If you believe that those expenses are justified, then you’re going to vote for it. If you think those expenses are exceeding, you’re going to vote against it,” Lara says.

The Crane Elementary School District is also having an election as they’re looking for an override to improve security across the district

Crane voters will only be able to vote by mail.

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