2 brothers killed after accidentally triggering explosion in Bell Gardens

By Matthew Rodriguez, Zach Boetto

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    LOS ANGELES (KCAL, KCBS) — The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department described Tuesday’s deadly explosion at a Bell Gardens apartment complex as a “tragic accident” caused by homemade explosives, possibly fireworks.

Investigators believe one of the half-brothers — Carlos Hernandez, 13 and Christopher Benitez, 23 — mixed energetic powders and may have pressurized the mixture, sparking the blast. Lt. Michael Modica said an example of energetic powders is gunpowder.

“We believe they were responsible for the explosion,” Modica said. “At this point, we believe it was a tragic accident.”

Detectives found pieces of plastic pipes at the scene along with energetic powders, which have been sent to their lab for testing.

“I keep saying that people just don’t understand how dangerous this stuff can be,” Bell Gardens Police Chief Paul Camacho said. “I think as a result of what we see behind us that is the consequence of not following the laws and not doing what you’re supposed to do.”

The explosion also hospitalized a young boy, who was in stable condition on Tuesday, according to the LA County Fire Department. The family said the boy was a relative of the half-brothers.

It caused significant damage to the apartment complex, destroying part of the second floor and the roof.

Camacho said about four to five families were displaced after inspectors red-tagged the building and marked it for demolition.

“I just don’t really know what’s going to happen to us,” neighbor Wendy Gutierrez said. “Where are we going to end up?”

The family said Hernandez was an altar server at his local church. Benitez served in the National Guard.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Aurora Public Schools, others in Colorado cancel, delay classes Friday due to staff shortages


KCNC

By Jennifer McRae

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    COLORADO (KCNC) — Aurora Public Schools is among several schools in Colorado that canceled classes on Friday due to staff shortages. Several other schools announced a delayed start on Friday.

The staff shortages are happening on the same day as a nationwide protest against Immigration and Customs Enforcement, where millions across the U.S. are expected to stay home from school and businesses are expected to remain closed.

In addition to Aurora Public Schools closure, Adams 14 School District and Pickens Technical College will remain closed on Friday.

Aurora Public Schools said there will be “grab-and-go” meals available at all schools in the district from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Friday.

With students not attending classes on Friday, they will have class next Friday, Feb. 6, which was originally supposed to be a day off for a professional release day.

Boulder Valley School District said nearly 500 teachers out of 2,000 called out sick for Friday but the district said classes will continue.

Denver Public Schools said it will have class, although some schools are operating on a delayed schedule.

All MI and AN Center Programs and Early Childhood Programs will be closed in DPS.

The following schools in DPS are on a two-hour delay:

George Washington High School North High School South High School East High School Joe Shoemaker Elementary McMeen Elementary Parents and students can view the School Closure list online.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Aurora Public Schools, others in Colorado cancel, delay classes Friday due to staff shortages

By Jennifer McRae

Click here for updates on this story

    COLORADO (KCNC) — Aurora Public Schools is among several schools in Colorado that canceled classes on Friday due to staff shortages. Several other schools announced a delayed start on Friday.

The staff shortages are happening on the same day as a nationwide protest against Immigration and Customs Enforcement, where millions across the U.S. are expected to stay home from school and businesses are expected to remain closed.

In addition to Aurora Public Schools closure, Adams 14 School District and Pickens Technical College will remain closed on Friday.

Aurora Public Schools said there will be “grab-and-go” meals available at all schools in the district from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Friday.

With students not attending classes on Friday, they will have class next Friday, Feb. 6, which was originally supposed to be a day off for a professional release day.

Boulder Valley School District said nearly 500 teachers out of 2,000 called out sick for Friday but the district said classes will continue.

Denver Public Schools said it will have class, although some schools are operating on a delayed schedule.

All MI and AN Center Programs and Early Childhood Programs will be closed in DPS.

The following schools in DPS are on a two-hour delay:

George Washington High School North High School South High School East High School Joe Shoemaker Elementary McMeen Elementary Parents and students can view the School Closure list online.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Dog lost for 6 days during snowstorm and sub-zero temperatures rescued in Beaver County

By Barry Pintar

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    BEAVER COUNTY, Pennsylvania (KDKA) — A dog missing for six days during a snowstorm and sub-zero temperatures was reunited with her owners after first responders rescued her from under a train trestle in Beaver County.

First responders said they were flagged on Tuesday night by a homeless man who spotted a dog below a train trestle in Bridgewater. They knew about a dog named Willow who had been missing for days, and it turned out she was down there, still alive.

“She did not want to come to us initially,” said David Shipman, a firefighter with the New Brighton Volunteer Fire Department. “You could tell she was cold. Scared of us, a bunch of strangers. She’s been down there for six days. She was covered in ice, like on the backend.”

Video taken by another first responder showed Willow being hoisted up. They think she had been down there for days, digging a trench and hunkering down to stay warm. The rest is anyone’s guess. But what matters is she’s safe.

“The sheer fact of a successful rescue and being able to reunite Willow with the family, it was great, right?” said Bridgewater Volunteer Fire Department Chief Chuck Bates. “Where the dog was, I’m surprised that she survived, and I’m very glad that she did, as is the family.” Willow is now happy to be back home with her family. How did she survive all that time? Her family says the answer may be in her DNA. She’s half Pomeranian and half husky.

“She has a lot of husky in her,” Willow’s owner Sydney Anderson said. “I think her cold survival instincts took place. I think she was able to find shelter and drink water, whatever she could find.”

The Beaver County lost and found pets Facebook page is collecting money to buy items to help out the “hero” who found Willow.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Nonprofit helps people with mental health, intellectual challenges find job opportunities

By Stephanie Stahl

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    PHILADELPHIA (KYW) — A Philadelphia nonprofit is helping people with mental health and intellectual challenges find job opportunities.

Joan Vargas is restocking the shelves at a North Philadelphia ShopRite. She has an intellectual disability and at 36 years old, this is her first job.

“I am a changed person here,” Vargas said.

Vargas obtained the job through COMHAR Inc., a nonprofit that supports people with mental health and intellectual challenges.

“This is about empowerment. It’s about having people make choices about what they want to do,” COMHAR CEO Trapeta Mayson said. “Being able to earn a living, being able to have agency in your life.”

Vargas works with a coach, Jeremiah Cousins.

“She’s bubbly, she knows how to — she’s focused, she’s very serious about what she does,” Cousins said.

Cousins says COMHAR provides job training and placement to support people who often face barriers because of the stigma that people with with these types of disabilities can’t work or are unreliable.

“They can do jobs, in fact many do a better job than current employees,” Cousins said.

A job giving her purpose, dignity and joy.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

NYPD accused of “stop-and-frisk on wheels” in new lawsuit

By Jessica Moore

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    NEW YORK (WCBS) — The New York City Police Department has been slapped with a lawsuit claiming officers are engaging in “stop-and-frisk on wheels.”

The department is accused of using traffic stops to target and humiliate tens of thousands of Black and Brown New Yorkers without cause, but the NYPD says their enforcement is data-driven.

NYPD accused of racially discriminatory car searches The NAACP of New York and two Black New Yorkers are suing the NYPD over what they call “widespread, unconstitutional use of racially discriminatory vehicle searches.”

“The searches are not driven by the evidence. They’re driven by racial bias,” New York Civil Liberties Union Executive Director Donna Lieberman said.

The NYCLU sued to obtain NYPD data showing more than 84% of vehicles searched from 2022 through September 2025 were driven by Black or Latino drivers, while White drivers made up less than 4% of vehicle searches.

That same data shows most of the searches occurred in Black and Latino neighborhoods. The three precincts with the highest search count were the 75th Precinct in Brooklyn, 113th Precinct in Queens, and the 44th precinct in the Bronx, all of which are comprised of at least 83% Black or Latino residents.

When asked to respond to the lawsuit, the NYPD referred CBS News New York to testimony from an April 2025 City Council hearing, in which the department said it sends more officers to high crime areas.

“And this stuff is objective. It’s, like, from 911 calls, OK? It’s not us, right? It’s the public telling us this,” said Joshua Levin, former NYPD director of legislative affairs. “And so as a result, any time that you have more police officers in a certain area, as a result, you are going to see more enforcement.”

The lawsuit seeks systemic changes within the NYPD that ensure Black and Brown New Yorkers are not unconstitutionally searched.

Justin Cohen is one of the two New Yorkers included in the lawsuit.

Video posted by the NYCLU shows his 2023 traffic stop in the Bronx, recorded by NYPD body cameras.

An officer appears to frisk Cohen as he gets out of the driver’s seat of the car, and at one point, the officer grabs both of Cohen’s hands and raises them from his sides to his shoulders.

“Wait, why are you searching me?” Cohen asks.

“Because when you moved around like that, that makes me think you might–” the officer says.

“Alright, I don’t, I don’t have anything,” Cohen says.

The NYPD found nothing illegal, but seized the car and arrested Cohen, issuing him a speeding ticket which was later dismissed.

“An independent investigation by the [Civilian Complaint Review Board] confirmed what I already knew — that I was being racially profiled by the police,” Cohen said Thursday. “So more than two years later I still ask myself, why me? Why did this happen?”

Cohen said he’s still afraid of police two years later.

“They’re supposed to be people who protect us, but apparently they can do what they want,” he said.

The NYPD would not comment on Cohen’s case specifically but said there are mechanisms like the CCRB by which citizens can and should report any traffic stop believed to be improper or illegal.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Idaho Pastor responds to allegations of Christian nationalism

David Pace

MOSCOW, Idaho (KIFI) – Christian nationalism is proving to be a hot topic in Idaho.

Following The City Club of Idaho Falls’ forum on Christian nationalism Tuesday, Local News 8 reporter David Pace reached out to Idaho Pastor Doug Wilson to see if he feels the ideas presented there accurately represent his faith.

You can listen to the full, unedited interview below.

Much of Tuesday’s community forum focused on Christ Church, a Moscow-based congregation of 1,300 people that is part of the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches (CREC).

“If they said, are you a Christian nationalist? I would say yes, depending on what you mean. So if you mean someone who wants an authoritarian dictatorship and missile parades and dictators with mirrored sunglasses, no, I’m not a Christian nationalist,” Wilson said. “If you’re asking whether or not I believe that America should return to her Christian roots, I would say yes.”

The faith has risen in prominence as U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth attends an affiliated church.

“One aspect of Christian theology applied to politics would be the necessity of limited government,” Wilson said. “So the first thing that would happen is that I’d want to defund 90 percent of it [the government].”

Wilson said he does support the separation of church and state – meaning that he does not believe in a state-sponsored church.

“One of the principal objections that the Christian nationalists have to the existing government is that it’s aspiring to be God. It’s aspiring to deity,” he said. “They want to film you at every traffic stop. They wanted to film you at every intersection. hey want to record every keystroke. They want to listen to every conversation – they’re aspiring to omniscience. They want to be God.”

“I’m fond of telling people, ‘If there is no God above the state, the state becomes God,” he continued. “And I don’t want the state to be God.”

His church believes in “planting churches, training ministers, planting Christian schools and teaching civics to kids.”

Today, there are more than 400 Association of Classical and Christian Schools patterned after Christ Church’s Logos School in Moscow, he said.

Wilson is a proponent of household voting – where each household has one vote, which is how his church operates.

While he has been criticized that this disenfranchises women, he clarified that single women and women who are heads of households do vote in this system and in his congregation.

Wilson addressed controversy and criticism of his teachings on race, marriage and family relations, and said these are often misquoted or taken out of context.

He said he does not, however, apologize for the teachings of the Bible.

You can view our full unedited interview above.

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Unsecured plywood flies off truck on I-10, shatters mother’s windshield

Shay Lawson

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – Karla Herrera, a Twentynine Palms mother, is speaking out after she said unsecured plywood flew off a truck on Interstate 10 and slammed into her vehicle, shattering her windshield while her infant daughter sat in the back seat.

She said the incident happened Tuesday night around 8:45 p.m. on I-10 westbound, about a quarter mile from Date Palm Drive.

“It was literally like a horror movie,” Herrera said.

She said she was driving home with her husband following behind her in a separate vehicle when several boards of plywood flew off a white truck traveling in the far-left lane.

Herrera said the truck carrying the plywood did not stop.

At least 4 boards were lifted by the wind and she said they went flying across lanes.

“It wasn’t like I was tailgating anyone,” Herrera said. “It was just really a freak accident.”

She said she braced for impact as the plywood struck her windshield, sending glass into her hair and face.

Despite the violent collision, she and her 8-month-old daughter were not injured.

“My daughter was in the back seat and she’s completely fine,” Herrera said. “Just a little traumatized.”

Photos show extensive windshield damage and debris inside the vehicle. Herrera credits the truck’s tinted windows with preventing more serious injuries.

She filed a report with the California Highway Patrol. She said she hopes the driver is identified but said her larger goal is preventing this from happening to someone else.

“It only takes an additional five minutes to strap things down,” she said. “You could be saving someone’s life.”

Herrera is now working with her insurance company to repair the damage, paying a $500 deductible out of pocket.

CHP urges drivers hauling items such as plywood to properly secure their loads before traveling on freeways.

Stay with News Channel 3 for the full story at 10 p.m. and 11 p.m.

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Local Republican legislators preview priorities for upcoming short session

Spencer Sacks

(Adding video and quotes from Republican Representatives Vikki Breese-Iverson and Mark Owens as well as Senator Mike McLane)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Beginning Monday, the 35 day legislative short session begins.

Among the many issues being addressed are the ongoing ODOT funding, and the major hole within the state budget.

All throughout this week, legislators in our area, as well as across the state, have been holding town halls to meet with and hear from their constituents.

Republican Representatives Vikki Breese-Iverson and Mark Owens as well as Senator Mike McLane spoke to more than two-hundred people, addressing the bills they’re working on, and the issues they’re following closely. 

On ODOT funding Representative Mark Owens said during the Town Hall, “They told us they weren’t going to plow our roads in our white lines. Similar conversation, you’ve heard me say before, are our lives worth less than those living in the metro area? It sure seems like that.”

On state budget cuts Representative Vikki Breese-Iverson said, “I think with with that lens, looking at it, it’s a great place for us to start looking at real reductions and hopefully shrinking government.”

On taxes Senator Mike McLane said, “One is potentially to disconnect from our federal tax code that has the effect of raising taxes pretty significant increase”

With the price of homes continuing to rise, residents all across the state look to their legislators to help address some of these issues.

They range from new legislation on homes, to increasing the exemptions of the estate tax.

The 3 legislators shared their hopes of solving the ongoing housing crisis.

Representatives Vikki Breese-Iverson said, “We have heard for several years now that we need more houses. We need to be able to build in Oregon. Oregon’s land use system isn’t really built for us to be able to easily build homes or for us to be able to expand our communities.”

The 35 day session runs until early march.

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Local American Legion Post 56 kitchen in works to open soon

Danyelle Burke North

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – A local American Legion post is looking to reopen their kitchen soon after temporarily closing it.

“In September of 2025, the officers of the American Legion decided to renovate the kitchen, so we shut it down,” said American Legion Post 56 finance officer Steve Mercado.

While the kitchen is closed, the hall and bar still remain open for locals to enjoy. The post also renovated the space with new floors and paint and had appliances inspected.

“The stove was a 1987 vintage, so it’s a good stove, but over time, over the years, some various parts were out, so they had to order new valves. We’re waiting on parts. That’s why our kitchen’s still closed,” said Mercado.

Once completed, they said they’re ready to reopen.

“We’ve already met volunteers. We’re ready to start preparing meals as soon as we’re up and running,” said Mercado.

American Legion Post 56 says they hope to have the parts by the end of February and have the kitchen back up and running to serve local veterans.

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