ICSO releases mugshot of suspect arrested for Pinetop murder

Dillon Fuhrman

IMPERIAL COUNTY, Calif. (KYMA) – The Imperial County Sheriff’s Office (ICSO) has released a mugshot of the man suspected of murdering Kerri Ann Abatti in Pinetop, Arizona.

63-year-old Michael Abatti was arrested Tuesday in El Centro for first degree murder in connection to his wife’s death.

ICSO says he was arrested without incident at a business on McCabe Road.

Multiple agencies believe Abatti traveled to Pinetop, Arizona and may have shot his wife, according to a Navajo County Public Information Officer.

Prior to the arrest, the Navajo County Sheriff’s Office (NCSO) said detectives served multiple search warrants on residence properties, and vehicles belonging to the Abatti family earlier this month, where they have seized a “significant amount of evidence” to identify Abatti as the primary suspect.

Also prior to the arrest, NCSO says detectives provided their testimony to the Navajo County Grand Jury and the Navajo County Superior Court issued both Abatti’s indictment and arrest warrant.

“We extend our sincere condolences to Kerri’s family and to all those affected by this tragedy. The Navajo County Sheriff’s Office is grateful for the cooperation of the other police agencies that worked countless hours alongside our Detectives. The Sheriff’s Office would also like to recognize the men and women who served on the Grand Jury who heard the evidence and concluded that an indictment was appropriate in this case, helping to bring justice to the Abatti family.”

Sheriff David M. Clouse, Navajo County Sheriff’s Office.

While we don’t know when he will be extradited to Navajo County, KYMA will keep you updated on this developing story.

Abatti Press ReleaseDownload

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Wilhoit promoted to major, to serve as commander with Missouri Highway Patrol

Danielle Bailey

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Capt. Steve. V Wilhoit will be promoted to the rank of major and will serve as commander of the Executive Services Bureau, the Missouri State Highway Patrol has announced.

The new position is effective Jan. 1, 2026.

Wilhoit was appointed to the Patrol in 1996 as a member of the 72nd Recruit Class. He has served in Linn and Chariton Counties; Macon, Missouri; Jefferson City; and Lee’s Summit as the commanding officer.

Wilhoit was born in Shelbina, Missouri. He attended Central Missouri State University in Warrensburg, Missouri.

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Well in the Desert cancels annual Christmas feast in Palm Springs

Luis Avila

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – A major holiday event that has traditionally served hundreds of people in need across the Coachella Valley has been canceled this year.

Well in the Desert announced it will not hold its annual Christmas Feast at the Palm Springs Convention Center. The organization says the decision was made to redirect resources toward meeting urgent food insecurity needs happening right now.

According to Well in the Desert President Matt Naylor, lingering disruptions in food assistance have increased demand across the valley, prompting the nonprofit to shift its focus from a single large holiday event to expanded, immediate outreach.

“During the government shutdown we had a problem with food insecurities and a lot of families that needed our help now so what the Well in the Desert board decided to do was take our money and put it where our mouth was and that was right now… We’re still continuing what we canceled, the Christmas event at the Convention Center, we’ve done double the amount of work of serving people without being there because they needed it now.”

Matt Naylor, Well in the Desert President

On Wednesday, Well in the Desert partnered with CV BBQ and Palm Desert Baseball to distribute free meals to the community.

For people experiencing homelessness, the support is critical. Mariah, who says she is currently unhoused, shared how impactful the meal distribution has been.

“I feel really good actually. I’m not used to people helping me. I’m used to doing it all myself so just to have a dinner to come to and be so far from home is really amazing.”

Mariah, Attendee

Despite the cancellation of the Christmas feast, Well in the Desert says its outreach has not slowed — and has, in fact, expanded.

The organization will continue distributing free meals on Christmas Day at Oscar’s in downtown Palm Springs from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m.

Stay with News Channel 3 for more.

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Melodee Buzzard’s mother arrested in connection with 9-year-old’s killing after her body is found

CNN Newsource

Originally Published: 23 DEC 25 14:53 ET

Updated: 24 DEC 25 12:49 ET

By Josh Campbell, Michelle Watson, CNN

(CNN) — The multi-state hunt for Melodee Buzzard, a missing 9-year-old California girl, came to a close when her remains were discovered in a rural area of southern Utah, authorities announced Tuesday.

Members of the sheriff’s office and the FBI arrested Ashlee Buzzard, Melodee’s mother, Tuesday morning on a charge of first-degree murder, Santa Barbara County Sheriff-Coroner Bill Brown said Tuesday.

Authorities say she deliberately tried to hide her steps, such as backing a rental car into gas stations in an attempt to avoid detection by their surveillance cameras.

The body was discovered by a couple who were taking photos in a remote part of Wayne County, Utah, Brown said. Wayne County authorities say the body was near a road with pieces of evidence nearby.

The remains couldn’t be immediately identified, he said, but “it was apparent that the decedent was a female who had died from gunshot wounds to the head.”

But DNA analysis found it was a familial DNA match to Melodee’s mother, he added.

It took less than 24 hours for a Utah crime lab to connect the body to Melodee’s disappearance, Wayne County Sheriff Micah Gulley said.

“We have recovered a significant amount of evidence that clearly indicates that this heinous crime was committed by Ashlee Buzzard, Melodee’s mother, and the very person upon who she relied upon and trusted the most in this world,” Brown said at a news conference.

CNN is attempting to determine whether Buzzard has an attorney.

Investigators do not have the murder weapon and have not established a motive, adding Buzzard is “uncooperative,” authorities said Tuesday.

Melodee’s paternal grandmother, Lilly Denes, told CNN affiliates KEYT and KSBY earlier Tuesday the sheriff’s office informed her Melodee’s body had been discovered.

“It’s really sad for us, especially that tomorrow is Christmas Eve and, you know, I have the rest of the grandkids coming home,” Denes told KEYT Tuesday.

She said she was the first person notified by police that her “baby was gone.”

“She’s over there with her dad now,” Denes said. Melodee’s father, who is Denes’ son, died in a motorcycle crash when Melodee was an infant.

CNN has reached out to Denes for comment.

Brown went through a timeline Tuesday that explained what led investigators to Melodee’s body.

Melodee was last seen October 9

Buzzard went on a road trip with her 9-year-old daughter on October 7, when surveillance footage captured the girl at a local car rental agency dressed in what seemed to be a disguise, authorities said.

Melodee was wearing a hoodie pulled over her head and “what appears to be a wig that is darker and straighter than her natural hair,” the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office previously said. “Investigators believe the wig may have been used to alter her appearance.”

The rental car traveled through Nebraska, Utah, Arizona, Nevada and Kansas before returning home to Lompoc, about 55 miles northwest of Santa Barbara, authorities said.

At some point along the trip, Buzzard switched the license plates on the vehicle she had rented to a New York plate, Brown said Tuesday.

“Investigators have confirmed that Ashlee was seen returning to her Lompoc residence on October 10, driving the same rental vehicle she departed with on October 7 – but Melodee was not in the car,” the sheriff’s office previously said.

The young girl was last seen on video surveillance with her mother on the Colorado side of the Colorado-Utah border on October 9, according to Brown.

Detectives, Brown said, now believe Melodee was killed shortly after that stop.

Melodee was reported missing days later, on October 14 – not by a family member, but by a school administrator concerned about her long absence.

The next day, October 15, detectives served a search warrant at Buzzard’s home, according to a release from the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office.

On October 30, sheriff’s detectives, along with the FBI Evidence Response Team, served follow-up search warrants at Buzzard’s home as well as for a storage locker and car she had recently rented, investigators said.

An expended cartridge case was recovered during the search of the home, Brown said, and during the search of the rental car a live round of similar ammunition was located, Brown said.

On December 17, the ATF found that cartridge cases from the Utah crime scene linked to a single cartridge case found at the Buzzard residence, authorities said.

“Cold-blooded and criminally sophisticated premeditation and heartlessness … went into planning” the crime, Brown said.

The “ruthlessness” that went into committing it, he added, was shocking.

“It’s unbelievable just to know that a mother could do this to their child,” Melodee’s aunt Lizabeth Meza said to CNN affiliate KSBY.

This story has been updated with additional information.

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

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SJSD audit finds no major issues as officials focus on budget recovery 

Prajukta Ghosh

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (KQTV)– The St. Joseph School District reviewed its 2024–2025 fiscal year audit, presented by Jon Cummings of KPM CPAs. 

According to Assistant Superintendent of Business and Operations Robert Hedgecorth, the audit identified no significant deficiencies or material weaknesses.  

Hedgecorth said one of the most helpful recommendations was ensuring timely reimbursement filings for Title funds and closely monitoring operating fund balances.  

“Making sure that we continue to gain back to the 20% board policy that we have. The auditor recommended 25%; our policy is at 20% with a middle area of 22 or 23%, which is a good place to be,” Hedgecorth added.  

Hedgecorth emphasized the importance of maintaining strong fiscal health as the district begins planning for the next budget cycle.  

He said the district is carefully reviewing operating decisions, particularly areas where expenses can be reduced.  

“We are actually going to start planning for our next year’s budget and that will include budget meetings with principals and directors,” Hedgecorth said.  

The district has set a goal of reducing its budget by $4 million in each of the next two years, totaling $8 million in expenditure reductions.  

Hedgecorth said projected revenue estimates helped determine the target, which he believes will put the district back on a path to financial recovery.  

“Those discussions will be hard because some of those budget allocations we reduced from last year are going through the building consolidation plan,” Hedgecorth said.  

Hedgecorth also said staff attrition, including retirements and resignations, will play a role in lowering expenses, especially with fewer buildings to staff.  

“I think people understand that we do need to get to that goal because it’s good, and I think people will come with the right mindset,” he added.  

Hedgecorth said he holds the responsibility for guiding the district out of its current financial challenges and ensuring fiscal responsibility moving into the next school year.  

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City of St. Joseph facilities closed, under different operating hours in observance of Christmas holiday

Leah Rainwater

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (KQTV) — The City of St. Joseph announced certain facilities will be closed or operate under limited hours in observance of the Christmas holiday.

On Christmas Eve, all City Offices, the Remington Nature Center, the REC Center and Joyce Raye Patterson 50+ Activity Center are closed.

The Landfill will be open from 7 a.m. to noon and the Recycling Center will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Christmas Eve.

City Offices, the Remington Nature Center, the REC Center, the Landfill, the Recycling Center, and the Joyce Raye Patterson 50+ Activity Center will be closed on Christmas Day.

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Charges allege ER doc committed sexual assault, domestic violence at Ashland address

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man who court documents say is an emergency room doctor was charged Tuesday with four felonies after an alleged sexual and domestic assault in Ashland.

Jeffrey L. Teeter, 46, was arrested early Tuesday at an Ashland address after a woman told deputies that he had slapped her, punched her, raped her and threatened her with a gun, including firing it out a window, according to a probable cause statement.

Teeter was charged with first-degree domestic assault, unlawful use of a weapon, armed criminal action and first-degree sodomy. He was in the Boone County Jail on Wednesday without bond.

Boone County deputies found a gun and shell casings at the scene that matched the victim’s story, the statement says. The woman also recorded audio of the incident, according to the statement.

The victim went to the emergency room for a sexual assault exam, the statement says.

The statement says Teeter is an emergency room doctor at a hospital in Pettis County. He has a Jefferson City address listed in court records.

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Jefferson City Salvation Army says it could cut programs without adequate Red Kettle donations

Alison Patton

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

Jefferson City Salvation Army is wrapping up the final hours of its Red Kettle Campaign on Wednesday, but the nonprofit says it needs even more donations to keep running its current programs.

Spokesperson Melinda Jennings said the goal was to raise $410,000, but as of Tuesday afternoon, the Salvation Army needed $76,000 to reach it.

“If we do not close this gap, we will be forced to make difficult decisions, including potentially reducing or cutting essential programs that support vulnerable families and individuals in our area,” Jennings said.

Salvation Army Major April Clarke said if the goal isn’t met, she might have to consider cutting programs or staff to fit operations into a tighter budget.

“We’re going to have to look at our budget and say, ‘Where can some cuts happen?’ and ‘Where can the biggest impacting with the least amount of felt impact be made?’,” Clarke said.

That could mean letting go of a part-time chef and instead relying on volunteers to help out in the kitchen, Clarke said.

The 2025 Red Kettle Campaign started on the 38th day of the 43-day federal government shutdown.

ABC 17 News spoke with Clarke in November, who said the Salvation Army was seeing an increased need among people who were relying on the free resources before the shutdown, furloughed workers and people who lost SNAP benefits during the shutdown.

On Wednesday, Clarke said people are still feeling that financial strain.

“Many people are living paycheck to paycheck, so even though they’re back to work, they’re not caught up on bills,” Clarke said. “They’re still using our food pantry, they’re still trying to alleviate some of the financial struggle that they encountered.”

The Red Kettle Campaign collections go until 6 p.m. on Wednesday, which is the last day volunteers will be accepting donations. However, people can still donate to the Red Kettle Campaign online and in person at 927 Jefferson St. through Dec. 31.

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Crossing Outreach’s new community center offers more opportunities to help the homeless

Patrick Holleron

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A room once used to store supplies has been transformed into a space to support and improve the lives of those in the homeless community.

That was the vision Crossing Outreach Ministry Executive Director Roger Lenander had in mind when planning the non-profit’s recently unveiled offices and community center at 613 S. 7th St.

For Lenander, the primary goal of the new venue is to provide help to the homeless, with new services to be offered beginning in 2026.

An inside look at the Crossings new venue taken on Dec. 23, 2025

“Starting after the first (day) of the (new) year we will have meetings once a week for those on the streets or are in need of shelter. They can come to talk in a group setting about where they are in their lives, if they want to move beyond being homelessness and ways to bring more stability to their lives,” Lenander said. “The sessions will contain not only those on the streets but also people from different agencies who can come and be a part of that conversation.”

Among the ideas planned for the center include life skills classes, bible study groups and social gatherings.

In addition to the meetings, the space will also be used to help provide food and shelter for over 1,800 individuals.

The new center marks the latest resource offered by the longstanding non-profit, including a thrift store and food bank which helps support countless people.

“The other thing we offer is our men’s Re-Entry Program, which will provide a space for them to be able to have meals or spend time together with family and friends,” Lenander said. “We believe this can help them on their road to finding stability in their lives.”

The Crossing Outreach is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and is located on 613 S. 7th St. For information on the services can be found by visiting their website at https://crossing-outreach.org/.

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SJSD offers kindergarten readiness programs with help from United Way

Patrick Holleron

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — United Way and the St. Joseph School District are teaming up to help parents and kids heading into kindergarten next year as part of a two-part readiness program.

United Way of Greater St. Joseph has announced its “KinderClub” program will be offered for free in all elementary schools in the district with dual programs taking place on Jan 13., 2026 and Feb 10., 2026 at elementary schools and the Noyes Administration Building.

The program aims to assist children — as well as parents and caregivers — with entering kindergarten for the 2026-27 school year. Sessions will be geared toward school readiness skills, while also providing information and resources to parents as their kids prepare to enter a key stage in their education.

Kindergarten readiness sessions will be led by St. Joseph School District staff. Families will also receive a book at the end of each session to add to their home libraries and tools to facilitate learning at home.

Those with additional questions or seeking information are encouraged to visit stjosephunitedway.org/sb6parents or call United Way of Greater St. Joseph at 816-364-2381.

For questions regarding which location to attend, call the St. Joseph School District Enrollment Center at 816-671-4115.

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