SJPD offers tips to prevent package theft during online shopping season

News-Press NOW

By: Darren Doyle

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (KQTV) — Doorsteps around the country are expected to see high traffic in the near future as consumer holidays approach.

The St. Joseph Police Department offered tips to ensure shipments stay in the right hands. 

Each year, around $16 billion is lost through package theft, according to the credit card company Capital One.

While some buyers feel they may not have options for keeping their package safe, the SJPD shared some simple tips to keep the package safe and ensure special gifts don’t go missing. 

“A lot of people aren’t going to brick-and-mortar stores anymore. The criminals know that, and they take advantage of that opportunity,” SJPD Sgt. Jeremy Peters said. “You know, as the volume increases around the holidays, you’ll, you know, we’re going to run into more of that problem.”

The number one tip for consumers is to have packages delivered to a store for in-person pickup. This can include having packages shipped to UPS drop-off lock boxes at convenience stores or around town. 

For some consumers, time may be a significant constraint, especially when they aren’t able to make it to the store or pickup locations to get packages. 

“You don’t want to leave stuff sitting out on the porch for too long. Also, if you can keep an eye on your neighborhood, because there are people who follow some of these delivery trucks around, and if you see something like that, call us as soon as you can so that we can look into it and try to intercept these vehicles and figure out what they’re doing,” Peters said.

SJPD also suggests a porch lockbox for the safekeeping of packages or a secure porch container to conceal incoming packages.

Peters and the Crime Prevention Crew also said being aware of neighborhood happenings and other suspicious activities is important.

He offered the advice, “If you see something, say something,” to all homeowners who spot a suspicious vehicle that may be surveying a neighborhood. Or if someone witnesses a package being stolen from their neighbor’s doorstep.

Security cameras can also help with general lookout of packages and other neighborhood happenings. Although it cannot suggest which video cameras to get, the SJPD crime prevention group offers free sight security assessment surveys to St. Joseph residents.

During these site surveys, crews make sure all cameras are positioned correctly to see as much of the property as possible. It can also identify people or vehicles that come into view of the cameras. 

“That would help us, as far as investigations go, if something were to happen, we want it to be the most useful for you and for us, so that we can solve that case,” Peters said. 

Local law enforcement also suggests having the package delivered when someone will be home to grab it. Another added layer of protection to this tip is to require a signature upon delivery of the package. 

Courtesy of SJPD via Facebook.

For more information on that free site security assessment from the SJPD, email crimeprevention@stjosephmo.gov or call 816-236-1473. 

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ITD and Jefferson County partner to install traffic signal in Rigby

Ariel Jensen

RIGBY, Idaho (KIFI) — A new traffic light is coming to Rigby to help traffic flow a little more smoothly.

It’s going into the intersection of State Highway 48 and  4000 East, through a partnership with Jefferson County and the Idaho Transportation Department. 

Right now, Jefferson County is doing paving work to slightly widen 4000 so it can accommodate the movement of the light signal.

“This signal has been something that Jefferson County has asked about for a long time. We have done traffic studies and tried to collect data for the last several years because it is a problematic stretch, through Rigby of State Highway 48,” said Sky Buffat PIO for the Idaho transportation department. “There are a lot of schools on that route, and we want to be cognizant and do what we can.”

The work zone is not expected to affect holiday travelers, and the speed limit will stay the same.

The street light is expected to be installed next spring. 

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Seasoned journalist David Pace joins Local News 8 team

Seth Randal

Experienced reporter David Pace has joined Local News 8 as a Multimedia Journalist, KIFI General Manager Kalvin Pike announced Wednesday.

David may be a familiar name to many in Eastern Idaho. He worked as a writer and editor for East Idaho News, was a senior reporter for the Idaho Falls Post Register newspaper, and reported for the Upper Valley Standard Journal in Rexburg. He most recently served as Press Secretary for U.S. Senator Mike Crapo.

“We’re delighted to add a journalist of David’s caliber to our team,” Pike said. “David has covered many of the biggest issues facing Eastern Idaho and Western Wyoming. We look forward to his shining a light on the stories our viewers care about.”

David has won numerous awards throughout his career, including a first-place award from the Idaho Press Club. He was also honored as “Distinguished Under 40” by the Greater Idaho Falls Chamber of Commerce.

“I’ve worked alongside David covering numerous East Idaho events, elections, and stories,” said Stephanie Lucas, Local News 8 Assistant News Director. “I was always consistently impressed with his drive, quick thinking, and ability to stay up to speed with major happenings and make important contacts within the industry,” Lucas said.

Joining Local News 8 is a full-circle moment for David, as he started his career as an editor for our sister station KIDK in 2008. David grew up in Idaho Falls and graduated from Idaho Falls High School. He earned the rank of Eagle Scout. David then served in the United States Marine Corps Reserves. He earned the Army Achievement Medal while serving as an Arabic cryptologic linguist for the Utah National Guard. He served a full-time mission in Rome, Italy, and later interned with the Public Affairs Department for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

He graduated from Brigham Young University in 2017 with a B.A. in Communications, Public Relations emphasis, and a double minor in Middle East Studies and Business Management. David also studied at Saïd Business School at Oxford University.

Viewers can look for David’s reports Monday through Friday, starting next week.

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USPS shares holiday shipping date guidelines

Carter Ostermiller

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (KQTV) — With Black Friday and online shopping deals hitting stores early, the United States Postal Service is preparing for its busiest time of year.

As Americans plan to splurge on Black Friday, Small Business Saturday and Cyber Monday deals, there are important guidelines the USPS recommends shoppers follow.

The St. Joseph United States Postal Service (USPS) is in its 250th year and preparing for another holiday season of delivering to people nationwide. 

For the delivery service, one of the biggest concerns for customers is arrival time and how to properly ship their packages.

“If you’re mailing a package, especially presents, we ask that you don’t wrap the package. If you do wrap the package, place it in another box, make sure that the package is large enough and then the contents are well secured,” USPS Strategic Communications Specialist Tara Jarrett said.

For USPS, the earliest shipping times are the most important tip for this time of year.

The USPS recommends packages shipping domestically by these dates to arrive before the Christmas holiday:

USPS Ground Advantage Service: Dec. 17 

Priority Mail Service: Dec. 18 

Priority Express Service: Dec. 20

For those concerned about arrival times, USPS, like many other postal services, has package tracking for shipped items.

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Andrew County residents don swimwear to promote aquatics initiative

News-Press NOW

By: Darren Doyle

ANDREW COUNTY, Mo. (KQTV) — Andrew County residents are wearing their swimwear while they’re “out and about” for social media videos, spreading awareness of local fundraising for a new pool.

“Because if we didn’t have a pool” has been the justification and mission of Andrew County area residents who have been sporting swimsuits at nail salons, Dentist Offices, Movie theatres and more.

The new trend takes inspiration from the ALS’s Ice Bucket Challenge; the Andrew County Aquatics Initiative (ACAI) is on a mission to raise awareness of its efforts to build a new pool. 

“It just felt like this is important, and the community wants this, and they are behind it, and we have felt that. In every step of the way, with just the simple donations to all the businesses that have come forward and wanted to help,” ACAI member Christie Lightle said.

To participate, residents are challenged by other ACAI members partaking in the trend, and are encouraged to nominate their own friends and family.

Participants can film a video of themselves in swim gear, goggles, a snorkel or other gear in an unusual place.

Interested participants also do not have to be directly nominated; they can mention the original post and start a new line of nominations. 

“I would say, just have fun with it. I mean, we don’t always get to be crazy and do silly things. And I mean, I personally did mine in the middle of the movie theater when I was watching Wicked. It was funny, because we were getting ready to start the movie, and I was in, I was clothed, but I kind of just shimmied out of my clothes into my swimsuit,” Lightle shared. “(Someone behind me was worried, but then had already seen the video.) The video had only been out for a few hours, and the announcement had only been out for a few hours, and they were so excited that they were there to witness it. So we’ve had such a good reception from people.” 

The ACAI said it plans to continue its fundraising journey through the end of the year.

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Confessed killer who fled to Idaho Falls sentenced to 60 Years for Bozeman Walmart Homicide

News Team

BOZEMAN, Montana (KIFI) — The man who confessed to brutally killing a woman and her dog in a Montana parking lot before fleeing with the victim’s remains to Idaho Falls has been sentenced to spend what will likely be the rest of his life behind bars.

On Tuesday, November 25, 2025, Judge Rienne H. McElyea sentenced Christopher Brandon Foiles, of Spokane, to 60 years in state prison with no possibility of parole for deliberate homicide.

On December 14, 2023, prosecutors say Foiles killed 34-year-old Megan Stedman and her dog in their RV while parked at a Walmart in Bozeman, MT. Foiles fled the state and was discovered a month later by law enforcement in Idaho Falls on Jan. 12, 2024, with his victim’s remains still inside the RV.

Court documents reveal IFPD detectives set up surveillance on the motorhome after it was discovered in the city, working with authorities in Montana to obtain a search warrant.

Eventually, Foiles left the RV, and a detective contacted him. Foiles told the officer, “I am Chris Foiles. I killed my girlfriend; she is in the RV.” Officers then found Stedman’s body inside the back of the RV.

RELATED: Man accused of murdering his girlfriend may have lived with her body for weeks

Folies was originally charged in Idaho with deliberate homicide in Idaho, where he initially pleaded not guilty, before being extradited to Montana. Once in the custody of the Treasure State, Folies was charged with deliberate homicide, aggravated animal cruelty, and identity theft.

Foiles initially pleaded not guilty but changed his plea to guilty in October.

In an interview with our partners KBZK in Bozeman, Stedman’s 16-year-old daughter Jasmine Nataba said it was the closure they deserved, adding that her mother was, and still is, her hero.

“I feel like justice has been served. I feel like it was a closing point for our family and it’s time to heal from this,” said Nataba. “I have to go on without her, and it hurts. I know that she’s still here with me, spiritually, just not physically.”

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St. Joseph begins study on four major intersections, including Ashland/Noyes, for potential layout changes

Cameron Montemayor

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Transportation planners have kicked off a monthslong study of four well-known and heavily-trafficked intersections in St. Joseph, studies that could pave the way for changes from traffic light improvements to potential roundabout construction.

The City of St. Joseph and GFT Infrastructure officially began a intersection improvement feasibility study Tuesday after City Councilmembers approved a $79,172 contract for the work at Monday’s council meeting.

“These were some of the highest priority (intersections) we wanted to look at,” said Max Schieber, transportation planner with the City of St. Joseph and the Metropolitan Planning Organization. “We’re going to be looking at crash data, traffic flows, to say ‘How can we improve this?'”

The four intersections in the study include:

Intersection No. 1: Outer Road and Riverside Road/Route AC.

Intersection No. 2: Ashland Avenue and Lover’s Lane.

Intersection No. 3: Ashland Avenue, Sherman Avenue, Osage Street and Northwest Parkway.

Intersection No. 4: Noyes Boulevard and Frederick Avenue.

All four of the intersections will be assessed to determine potential safety, operational and geometric improvements. The intersections each present a unique layout that can make it prone to accidents and injuries.

“Ashland and Northwest Parkway is definitely a tough one that we’ve had a number of accidents at,” Schieber said. “Outer Road and Route AC is one of our biggest.”

The study, expected to be complete by next spring, will include traffic data collection, evaluation of current intersection conditions and development of conceptual alternatives.

He said the improvements could also be as simple as adjustments in traffic light patterns to improve traffic, ease congestion and reduce accidents.

“Roundabouts are something we’re definitely looking at,” he said. “And then also any possible changes with lights.”

Schieber said the feasibility study likely wouldn’t be possible without a Consolidated Planning Grant from the Federal Transit Administration, which is covering 80% of the $79,000 study.

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SJSD high school tracks to remain closed this winter, reopen next March for public use

Cameron Montemayor

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The St. Joseph School District has provided a timeline on the reopening of tracks for public use at all three high schools, facilities often used by residents for walking and exercise.

A sign informs pedestrians the Central High School track is closed due to renovations.

The St. Joseph School District track installation project is nearing completion, but is not yet final. The tracks at all three high schools remain closed, according to a statement from the district.

The district recently carried out an extensive $6.5 million improvement project to install new turf fields and replace aging tracks at the high schools, part of a $20 million bond approved by voters in April 2024.

“With colder temperatures and winter weather approaching, conditions are not ideal for safely reopening the tracks for public use. To protect the integrity of the new surfaces and ensure long-term durability, the District will keep the tracks closed throughout the winter months,” the statement reads.

The district anticipates the tracks will reopen for public walking and community use on March 1, 2026, weather permitting.

“We appreciate everyone’s patience and flexibility. Limiting access now ensures that our tracks will be ready for spring activities and helps us avoid delays caused by late-season weather.”

A full list of 2024 bond-funded projects can be found here.

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Non-profit investigation spurs Idaho DOC to reopen former inmate’s sex abuse case, reverses finding

InvestigateWest

Editor’s note: “Guarded by Predators” is an investigative series exposing rape and abuse by Idaho’s prison guards and the system that shields them. Find the entire series at investigatewest.org/guarded-by-predators.

By Whitney Bryen / InvestigateWest

IDAHO — For nearly a year and a half, Andrea Weiskircher has been pleading with prison officials, state leaders and law enforcement to look at the evidence. 

In the summer of 2024, Weiskircher accused five Idaho prison workers of sexually abusing her while she was incarcerated. She had sexually explicit texts, Facebook messages and emails from correction officers and a prison delivery man, Weiskircher told investigators. Any sexual contact between an inmate and prison staff — even voyeurism and harassment — is prohibited by federal standards designed to protect people in custody who are vulnerable to sexual extortion by workers. 

But no one in a position to help believed her. Until now. 

In a Nov. 21 email, Department of Correction Director Bree Derrick told Weiskircher that after reviewing only “a handful” of those messages, prison system investigators were able to substantiate Weiskircher’s allegations against one of those men, Joseph Mena. The decision to reopen the case comes after a series of reports from InvestigateWest exposing shoddy investigations into complaints like Weiskircher’s.

Weiskircher accused Mena, who packaged and delivered commissary items to Idaho prisons, of kissing her while she was incarcerated at South Boise Women’s Correctional Center, bringing her tobacco and other contraband, and propositioning her after she was released. Mena, who no longer works for the prison system, did not respond to calls and messages from InvestigateWest for this story. When reached by phone in September, Mena denied the allegations. 

Department of Correction investigators can’t conduct criminal investigations, only administrative ones, which means Mena likely won’t face any consequences unless law enforcement also reopens a case against him. But for Weiskircher, the new finding means someone believed her, and that was worth the fight. 

“I feel like we won,” Weiskircher told InvestigateWest. “It’s because we all did it together and we didn’t give up. They had to fix it. They had no choice.”

Derrick told Weiskircher that the “finding was just made this week, and I hope demonstrates our commitment to thoroughly investigating your claims, including all relevant evidence.”

There is still a long way to go to create a more “just and humane” system for people in state custody, Weiskircher said. Weiskircher’s decision to report the abuse unwittingly inspired seven other women to report their abuse to the Department of Correction last summer. Those allegations were among dozens uncovered in a series from InvestigateWest that revealed a decade of unchecked sexual abuse by staff at Idaho women’s prisons. As part of the yearlong probe, more than two dozen women told reporters how they were raped, assaulted, coerced and harassed by Idaho prison workers while they were incarcerated. Some refused to file a report, fearing retaliation. And those who did said they were the ones punished — placed in segregated housing and ostracized by other inmates and staff. 

Since 2020, there have been at least 59 documented allegations of staff sexually abusing imprisoned women, InvestigateWest found. Many of those complaints, like Weiskircher’s, were marked as unfounded following little investigation by the Department of Correction. A prison system spokesperson would not share whether any other investigations have been reopened since the news reports were published.    

In Weiskircher’s case, the Department of Correction and Idaho State Police originally marked the allegations as unfounded or “determined not to have occurred,” according to a form sent to Weiskircher from the prison system explaining her case was closed. She sent letters and emails objecting to the decision and offering the evidence she had on her phone. But her appeals were dismissed until the InvestigateWest reports were published in October, including one article highlighting Weiskircher’s fight for justice.

In response to the reporting, Gov. Brad Little ordered the Board of Correction to review sexual abuse cases and the prison system’s public records request process. Advocacy groups have condemned the state’s failure to protect women in its custody, calling it “shameful” and “horrifying,” and demanded immediate action. And at least one state lawmaker is looking for ways to improve prison policies and state law to protect inmates.

Since she was released to drug court in June, Weiskircher has become an even more vocal advocate for women like her. She has written to lawmakers and the governor imploring them to implement solutions that have increased safety for inmates in other states, including: 

expanding Idaho’s prisoner rape law to align with federal standards;

adding a mandatory fine for those convicted of inmate sexual abuse to support victims and prevention efforts;

establishing a corrections ombudsman to provide independent oversight of state prisons;

extending the statute of limitations on these crimes to allow victims time to come forward when they’re no longer under the control of their abuser.  

For victims of rape in Idaho, there is no time limit for when the accused can be criminally charged — unless the victim is an inmate. Sexual contact with a prisoner, the felony charge meant to protect people behind bars from abuse by prison staff, must be filed within five years of the assault. But in some cases, victims are still in custody when that clock runs out, leaving them two options: Report their abuse while they remain under the authority of the person they accused, or forfeit the chance to see their abuser punished. 

Charee Nelson at Christmas with her family’s cat in 2016. Nelson is one of seven women who filed complaints of sexual abuse against Idaho prison workers in the summer of 2024. InvestigateWest found that none of their complaints were properly investigated. (Photo courtesy of Nelson’s family)

Like most of the women who reported their abuse last summer, Weiskircher waited until she was no longer in the custody of the Department of Correction, limiting her opportunities for justice. Of the five men she accused of sexual abuse, the statute of limitations has expired on allegations against at least three of them. Weiskircher’s allegations against Mena, the former prison delivery man, remain within the legal time constraints. Even though kissing is prohibited by federal standards and by Idaho prison policy, Mena can’t be charged for allegedly kissing Weiskircher under the current state law designed to protect inmates from staff abuse because it only criminalizes sexual contact involving someone’s genitals.

“The current legal and institutional framework in Idaho does not impose sufficient punitive consequences on staff who abuse incarcerated people,” Weiskircher wrote in a Nov. 25 email to lawmakers and Gov. Little. “Without mandatory fines or similarly strong accountability, some abusive guards may view the risk as little more than a career setback — not a serious deterrent.”

Despite the legal limitations, Weiskircher is pushing the prison system and state police to reexamine all five men she accused.

Federal law mandates that the Department of Correction perform an administrative investigation anytime staff sexual abuse is reported. If prison investigators find policy violations, the department can fire, suspend, demote or otherwise discipline staff. And it can use the results to improve policies and procedures increasing the safety of inmates. But the prison system lacks the authority to investigate criminal allegations. That falls to Idaho State Police.  

A screenshot of Facebook messages from Joseph Mena, a former Idaho Department of Corrections commissary contractor, to Andrea Weiskircher after she was released from the South Boise Women’s Correctional Center. The department recently reopened its investigation into Weiskircher’s claim that Mena kissed her in violation of a federal law that protects inmates from abuse by staff. (Whitney Bryen/InvestigateWest)

The state police only took on Weiskircher’s case following pressure from an Ada County judge. But her claims were not thoroughly investigated, according to case files that the agency provided to InvestigateWest. Detectives merged Weiskircher’s allegations with two other women, even though they accused different men at different prisons. None of the men Weiskircher accused were contacted by police. Weiskircher emailed some of the messages that the Department of Correction used to substantiate one of her claims to a detective, but there was no mention of them in the case files. Her case was closed as “determined not to have occurred” after a detective misrepresented the facts in her case file, claiming that she told him she never had any sexual contact with prison guards — despite an audio recording of his interview proving otherwise.

State police launched an internal affairs investigation into at least one of the detectives who worked on Weiskircher’s case, she and her attorney told InvestigateWest after they met with a lieutenant. Police spokesman Aaron Snell did not respond to questions about the investigation into one of the detectives or whether Weiskircher’s case was being reopened. 

Weiskircher met with a Department of Correction investigator Monday who told her he would review all of her evidence and determine if any of her other claims need to be reopened, she told InvestigateWest. In an emailed statement, the Department of Correction said it is “carefully reviewing” evidence shared by Weiskircher and will reopen investigations into her other claims “if warranted.” 

None of the men she accused still work for the Department of Correction. However, if her claims are substantiated, the accused could have their officer certifications revoked, a red flag on their record that could prevent them from being hired for another position where they oversee vulnerable people. One of the men she accused is working as a correction officer in Oregon. 

For Weiskircher, it’s not only about holding these men accountable. It’s also about holding the system accountable. 

“Making them acknowledge they did something wrong is the only way to make them fix it,” Weiskircher said. “I told the truth about all of it. Not some of it. Not part of it. All of it. And I’m not going to stop until they make it right.” 

InvestigateWest (invw.org) is an independent news nonprofit dedicated to investigative journalism in the Pacific Northwest. Reporter Whitney Bryen can be reached at 208-918-2458, whitney@investigatewest.org and on X @WhitneyBryen.

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Idaho Falls Airport parking lot hits capacity on busy Thanksgiving travel day

Ariel Jensen

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — With Thanksgiving tomorrow, November 27th, people are heading to their holiday destination. 

Roads are expected to be busy today as AAA of Idaho projects 82 million Americans are traveling this holiday weekend, and airports are already seeing a crowd.

Looking for parking at the Idaho Falls airport, it’s usually not an issue. However, this year, the parking lot is filled, as a line of cars parked along the side of the road near the exit path when parking reached capacity.

The city of Idaho Falls is urging people to try using a GIFT( Greater Idaho Falls Transit), lift, Uber, or try calling a family friend to take you to the airport. 

The city is not sure how long the parking lot will be full for, but they say it is expected to be a packed lot over the holiday weekend. Travelers are being asked to arrive at the airport two hours before their flight.

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