O’Fallon man dead after drowning in Lake of the Ozarks

Olivia Hayes

LAKE OZARK, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 36-year-old man from O’Fallon, MO is dead after drowning in the Lake of the Ozarks, according to the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

The MSHP drowning report, said the man was last seen on a dock at the 40.1 mile marker of the Osage at the lake. He is believed to have entered the water by an unknown means and then later reported missing.

The man’s body was recovered by state troopers around 8:30 Saturday morning in the water and he was pronounced dead at the scene.

MSHP does not release the name of the victim in their reports.

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Last-Minute Shoppers Enjoy Pocatello Winter Markets

Hadley Bodell

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) – On the weekend before Christmas, there are still chances to get a homemade, special gift for your loved ones. Pocatello hosted two different winter markets today for last-minute shoppers.

The Museum of Clean hosted the Portneuf Valley Winter Market this afternoon complete with food trucks and live music. Shoppers enjoyed local vendors selling everything from homemade treats to crochet animals.

The indoor market offers shoppers a warmer option for small-business support as the market moves inside for the winter months. The Grinch and Santa even made special appearances for families to enjoy at the Museum of Clean. Over at Station Square, 25 local vendors show off their crafts every weekend.

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Idaho State University Celebrates Winter Class of 2025 at Commencement Ceremony

Hadley Bodell

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) – The semester just wrapped up at ISU and for some, that meant the end of their college education. The ICCU Dome was packed this morning with loved ones to watch the students in the winter class of 2025 walk the graduation stage.

The university conferred more than one thousand degrees at this mornings’ ceremony. The alma mater was performed by the ISU treble choir and the National Athem by student Jacob Williams.

Speakers at this semester’s commencement included State Board of Education trustee and ISU alumna Cindy Siddoway and student speaker Tamisha Green.

President Robert Wagner also gave his remarks, celebrating graduates from each college on the campus as well as the doctoral and masters’ programs.

On Friday, graduates walked back through the arch near the Frazier Hall building on campus, an ISU tradition to mark the end of the graduates’ educational journies. As freshmen, students walk through the arch one direction and walk through it the other way on their graduation weekend to signify their accomplishments and obtaining of their degrees.

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A Pueblo event that’s been giving back for 20 years continues this holiday season

Michael Logerwell

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) – It’s an Absolutely Colorado event that’s been giving back to kids in Pueblo County who needs help during the holiday season.

Mary “Mama” Jaramillo started the Christmas Stocking Giveaway, but even after her death in 2009, the event has continued the giving tradition.

Now the Mama’s Christmas Stocking giveaway is run by Melissa Rodriguez, Jaramillo’s daughter. She told KRDO13 that her mother started the event by giving away Christmas stockings, jucie and cookies. At the event this weekend, Rodriguez said they’ve upgraded to giving out pizza and gifts to kids while continuing the Christmas stocking tradition.

In recent years, other parts of the community, like the Pueblo Police Department and local restaurants, have stepped up to expand the reach of the annual holiday event.

Based on pictures posted by the Pueblo Police Department, the calm weather made for a great day at St. Annes Park.

All photos from the Pueblo Police Department.

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1 year after Pueblo man found dead in freezer, his family still searching for answers

Marina Garcia

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) – It’s been nearly one year since a disturbing discovery was made on Pueblo’s north side, and no arrests have been made.

Family members say they still don’t know how 33-year-old Eric Anthony Tress ended up dead inside a freezer in the backyard of his neighbor.

Yesterday his family celebrated his birthday, marking another year around the globe.

But instead of a celebration, it’s a somber event, with one key person absent, and family members pleading for answers, refusing to let this be just another cold case.

“We should have been celebrating his life, not grieving his death,” says Eric’s mother, Wendy Tress. “It feels like it happened yesterday.”

On Christmas Eve, 2024, Pueblo police officers were called to a home on the north side of Pueblo.

There they found 33-year-old Eric Anthony Tress’ body in a freezer, in a neighbor’s backyard.

“Sometimes I can still kind of hear him saying my name around the house. You know, Ash. Was that Eric?” Says his grieving sister, Ashley Tress.

And almost a year later, his family still doesn’t know how he got there…or why.

KRDO13 reached out to the Pueblo Police, but we are awaiting any updates they may be able to provide.

“We want him to be at peace, you know, and I think justice would bring all of us peace,” says Ashley Tress. “I’m just glad I have my necklace because he’s always with me, my brother. Always. He was like my best friend. He was always there for me, no matter what.”

The family is urging anyone with information to call the police department.

They will also be hosting a vigil for Eric on December 23, at 2318 N. Main St at 6:30 at night and they are inviting all to attend. 

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Indio business hosts ‘Field Day’ recognizing local subcultures, niche products

Kendall Flynn

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – Saturday marked the first ever “Field Day” event in Indio as organizers look to showcase unique music, shopping and food from local vendors.

The event was created by Adrian Romero, the owner of Rosemary Hi-Fi. He said he created the event because there aren’t enough platforms for artists or creative businesses in the Coachella Valley. He said vendors would often have to travel to other cities, including Los Angeles or San Diego for a subculture event.

“Everything is very franchise and mainstream out here in the desert,” Romero said. “And so we just want to bring more art and more culture and just more niche things.”

For Frank Lemus, a local ceramic artist and owner of Alfarería Lemus, he said “Field Day” is a chance for local businesses like his to grow close to home. He said the event brings together the owners, who have now become a close-knit community.

“This is where I grew up, so it’s it’s cool to see all the, the businesses, local businesses out here and growing,” Lemu said. “There’s sometimes a lot of times we have to go out of town to do kind of events like this. So it’s really cool that they’re putting it together here, and it takes a lot of effort to put an event like this together.”

Residents said they were excited to attend the event after seeing the event on social media. Many said they enjoy having somewhere to listen to music and shop with local vendors. For them, it’s a unique experience that shows how much Indio has grown.

“I think the City of Indio is really stepping up their game,” Grace Escobar said. “They’re bringing out more and more community events so that everybody can come by and have fun.”

“Over the last two years, I’ve seen so much, so much growth in the city, so much more for people who just love to get out and enjoy music, arts, culture, food,” Lucie Gonzalez said. “It just shows that Indio is on the map.”

Stay with News Channel 3 to hear from organizers and attendees about how they hope subculture events continue to grow.

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‘CHiPS for Kids’ toy drive delivers toys to East Valley

KESQ News Team

COACHELLA VALLEY, Calif. (KESQ) – California Highway Patrol delivered hundreds of toys to families in Thermal, Mecca, Oasis and Santa Rosa Saturday morning as part of the CHiPS for Kids holiday toy drive.

For weeks, News Channel 3 collaborated with CHP to donate hundreds of toys provided by the Coachella Valley community.

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Deck The Walls event brings mountain fun to the City of Bend

KTVZ

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — The first ever Deck the Walls Event took place on Saturday with hundreds of people in attendance.

Outside of Bend Brewing Co. the skiing and snowboarding competition brought the community together and brought snow with them.

The Snow the riders are riding on is fresh snow brought from Mount Bachelor. The excitement is palpable.

Packy Deenihan, the owner of Bend Brewing Co, told KTVZ News, “I think everybody’s really anxious to see some snow and see a snowboard and ski event. This morning when the snow got dropped off, there was like 30 people who just showed up with shovels ready to work. It was really cool to see the community come together and, you know, just all manpower brought the snow down here and shaped everything. it’s been really cool.”

The event had incredible tricks, an amazing atmosphere, and all family fun.

This was the first time many of the 25 local riders were on snow since last season.

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WWII Navy veteran Ira ‘Ike’ Schab, one of last remaining Pearl Harbor survivors, dies at 105

Associated Press

(AP) — World War II Navy veteran Ira “Ike” Schab, one of the dwindling number of survivors of the 1941 Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, has died. He was 105.

Daughter Kimberlee Heinrichs told The Associated Press that Schab died at home early Saturday in the presence of her and her husband.

With his passing, there remain only about a dozen survivors of the surprise attack, which killed just over 2,400 troops and propelled the United States into the war.

An attendee asks Pearl Harbor survivor Ira “Ike” Schab, 103, to sign an U.S. flag during the 82nd Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day ceremony on Thursday, Dec. 7, 2023, at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Schab was a sailor of just 21 at the time of the attack, and for decades he rarely spoke about the experience.

But in recent years, aware that the corps of survivors was dwindling, the centenarian made a point of traveling from his home in Beaverton, Oregon, to the annual observance at the Hawaii military base.

“To pay honor to the guys that didn’t make it,” he said in 2023.

For last year’s commemoration, Schab spent weeks building up the strength to be able to stand and salute.

But this year he did not feel well enough to attend, and less than three weeks later, he passed away.

Born on Independence Day in 1920 in Chicago, Schab was the eldest of three brothers.

He joined the Navy at 18, following in the footsteps of his father, he said in a February interview for Pacific Historic Parks.

On what began as a peaceful Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941, Schab, who played the tuba in the USS Dobbin’s band, was expecting a visit from his brother, a fellow service member assigned to a nearby naval radio station. Schab had just showered and donned a clean uniform when he heard a call for fire rescue.

Pearl Harbor survivor Ira Schab, right, is saluted by various members of the armed forces as he leaves the 75th Anniversary National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day Commemoration on Kilo Pier at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2016, in Honolulu.

He went topside and saw another ship, the USS Utah, capsizing. Japanese planes roared through the air.

“We were pretty startled. Startled and scared to death,” Schab recalled in 2023. “We didn’t know what to expect, and we knew that if anything happened to us, that would be it.”

He scurried back below deck to grab boxes of ammunition and joined a daisy chain of sailors feeding shells to an anti-aircraft gun above.

His ship lost three sailors, according to Navy records. One was killed in action, and two died later of fragment wounds from a bomb that struck the stern. All had been manning an anti-aircraft gun.

Schab spent most of the war with the Navy in the Pacific, going to the New Hebrides, now known as Vanuatu, and then the Mariana Islands and Okinawa, Japan.

After the war he studied aerospace engineering and worked on the Apollo spaceflight program as an electrical engineer for General Dynamics, helping send astronauts to the moon.

Schab’s son also joined the Navy and is a retired commander.

Speaking at a 2022 ceremony, Schab asked people to honor those who served at Pearl Harbor.

“Remember what they’re here for. Remember and honor those that are left. They did a hell of a job,” he said. “Those who are still here, dead or alive.”

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UPDATE: Fort Carson fire didn’t expand overnight, smoke could still be visible

Michael Logerwell

FT. CARSON, Colo. (KRDO) – Good news from Ft Carson after smoke and flames were seen from its property on one of the windiest days of the year.

PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Smoke visible from fire on Fort Carson

On Friday, Ft Carson told KRDO13 the fire in the base’s impact training area was around 1,600 acres, and it seems that’s the biggest it will get.

Saturday afternoon, a Ft Carson spokesperson shared the good news:

“All perimeter lines established around the fire held throughout the night. Smoke will be visible as crews continue to monitor the fire within the impact area.”

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