Desert Hot Springs man charged with sexually abusing foster children

City News Service

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – A Desert Hot Springs man accused of repeatedly sexually abusing foster children was charged today with multiple felony offenses.   

Sergio Avalos Perez, 64, was arrested Tuesday following a Riverside County Sheriff’s Department investigation that began in December.   

Perez is charged with three counts of lewd acts on a minor and one count each of forced oral copulation of a child and sexual assault of a child under 10 years old, as well as sentence-enhancing allegations of targeting multiple victims in sex crimes and perpetrating sexual offenses on youths under 14 years old.  

The defendant pleaded not guilty during an arraignment Thursday before Superior Court Judge Elizabeth Tucker, who scheduled a felony settlement conference for Feb. 2 at the Larson Justice Center in Indio.

Perez is being held without bail at the Benoit Detention Center in Indio.   

According to a bail-setting affidavit filed by sheriff’s Detective Arnoldo Iniguez, deputies were notified in mid December of a possible sexual assault perpetrated by the defendant at the foster home run by him and his wife, whose identity wasn’t disclosed.

Court records allege the offenses were perpetrated on three girls, whose identities also were not disclosed, over a four year period. 

Iniguez said investigators interviewed a young girl on Dec. 15, who recalled an encounter during which Perez forced her to orally copulate him. 

“She stated he did the same act twice,” according to the affidavit. “During this investigation, (a total of) three underage females who were fostered by Perez and his wife disclosed they were sexually abused while they lived with him in his home, while he operated the foster care residence.”

Another young alleged the defendant forced her to perform oral sex, too, according to Iniguez.   

Investigators conducted an interview with the defendant at the sheriff’s Palm Desert station Tuesday. He denied many of the alleged offenses, but “did confess that one time when (a victim) was doing laundry, he noticed she was bent over.”

After his arrest, Iniguez said several others came forward, alleging he had fondled them or behaved in an otherwise lewd manner, according to the affidavit.

The defendant has no documented prior felony convictions in Riverside County.

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Longtime St. Joseph residents create new book ‘Voices of the Past ll: Mount Mora Cemetery’

Patrick Holleron

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — After releasing their first book “Voices of the Past: Mount Mora Cemetery” in 2024, St. Joseph residents and avid historians Suzanne Lehr and Megan Wyeth have released a second book in the series.

Based on the history and lives of St. Joseph’s past residents who reside at Mount Mora Cemetery, their second book, “Voices of the Past ll: Mount Mora Cemetery,” continues to expand on the scripture and connections rooted within the historic cemetery built in 1851.

The tombstone of Purd B. Wright, the St. Joseph Public Library’s founder, is shown Thursday at Mount Mora Cemetery in St. Joseph.

One of those connections is Purd B. Wright, who founded the St. Joseph Public Library in 1890.

“It’s amazing how Wright was able establish the library,” Lehr said. “He was worried people were not able to get books and learn. And he arranged for everyone to have the ability to do so.”

The idea to flesh out and discover more about people like Wright who made their marks in St. Joseph dates back to the early 2000s, when Lehr first came to Northwest Missouri.

“I began research here (St. Joseph) in about 2001 and started recording some of the stories which were used in Voices of the Past a year later,” Lehr said. “Looking through the stories I wrote, Megan and myself decided a couple of years ago to publish some of these stories. We want the younger generation to know who these people were, where they came from and what they did. One of the founders of Mount Morah owned the stables where the Pony Express began. We have those kinds of connections. That’s why it’s important to keep carrying the history forward.”

Having Wyeth — the book’s photographer — capture the physical elements of Mount Mora was equally important in broadening the reader’s perspective.

“Matching up the photographs to the stories is a challenge, but it was fun to bring the stories into reality, into real life,” Wyeth said. “Having photographed here over the years, I’ve always been intrigued by the way light falls on the trees and tombstones at Mount Mora. It’s kind of unusual, which I think is due to the hills. I want readers to be able to experience that unique phenomenon as they relive St. Joseph’s past when they open the book.”

Of the stories featured, a personal favorite for both Lehr and Wyeth is the Townsend Mausoleum, the structure pictured on the cover of the new book.

The Townsend Mausoleum at Mount Mora Cemetery is shown on Thursday in St. Joseph.

“I was always fascinated by the mausoleum. I start to wonder what my parents thought when they were both alive and the day the granite for the mausoleum was brought through town,” Wyeth said. “I’m sure everyone in the whole city knew the granite, which weighed at least 24 tons, was traveling from New York to here.”

Copies of “Voices of the Past ll: Mount Mora Cemetery” can be purchased at Nesting Goods, the Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art and the St. Joseph Convention and Visitors Bureau.

A book signing event will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. on Wednesday, March 21st at the Wyeth-Tootle Mansion located on 1100 Charles St.

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Palm Springs boy appears on Jennifer Hudson Show after his hair tutorials go viral

Jesus Reyes

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – A Palm Springs boy made an appearance on the Jennifer Hudson Show today!

Six-year-old Luka Jimenez went on the show after going viral on TikTok for giving hair tutorials. The young hairstylist says that his passion for hair comes from watching his mom style her own hair.

Jimenez said he wants to “make everybody look beautiful and feel beautiful!”

He was also able to showcase his skills on the show.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by The Jennifer Hudson Show (@jenniferhudsonshow)

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Kehoe declares state of emergency ahead of intense cold, weekend snowstorm

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Gov. Mike Kehoe signed an executive order on Thursday that declared a state of emergency for Missouri ahead of inclement winter weather.

Kehoe’s office announced the precautionary order in a press release. The order also activates the National Guard for state and local response efforts, if needed. The order expires on Feb. 22.

“With hazardous winter weather forecasted for this weekend across much of the state and nation, our focus is on preparedness and coordination,” Kehoe said in the release. “Declaring a State of Emergency allows the state to respond quickly and support local communities as needed, but each of us must do our part. We’re asking Missourians to stay informed, plan ahead, and use extreme caution during this potentially dangerous winter weather event.”

The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning for much of the area, with Boone County expecting to get between 4-8 inches of snow on Saturday, and areas south of our viewing area having the chance to experience more snow.

Expected sub-zero wind chills for Friday morning led to some area schools to call off classes.

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Lompoc Police search for two Ulta Beauty thieves

Caleb Nguyen

LOMPOC, Calif. (KEYT) – The Lompoc Police Department is looking for two thieves of an Ulta Beauty store after they stole $1,100 worth of merchandise on Jan. 14.

One thief wore a blue Nike hooded sweatshirt, jeans ripped at the knees and sandals, holding onto a white purse, according to the LPD.

The second wore a gray shirt with the words “NEW YORK” across the chest and also had a white handbag with a brown handle, according to the LPD.

Both women now have shoplifting charges against them, and those with information can submit anonymous tips to the LPD.

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Chamber urges restaurants to sign up for Restaurant Week

Leah Rainwater

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (KQTV) — The St. Joseph Chamber of Commerce is urging local restaurants to sign up for the tastiest week of the year.

St. Joseph Restaurant Week will be held Feb. 23 through March 1. Restaurants are encouraged to sign up on the Chamber’s website, saintjoseph.com.

The community is encouraged to come together to enjoy special menus, creative dishes and exclusive offers, while also supporting local businesses.

Restaurants can choose a menu item at the $10, $15 or $30 price point to be a signature dish or dishes for the week.

“It’s always fun when the dish is something that’s not regularly on the menu,” said Natalie Hawn, the president and CEO of the St. Joseph Chamber of Commerce. “This is a great way to test a dish that could be a regular on the menu later on.”

The fee for restaurants to participate is $50 for Chamber members and $75 for non-members. All restaurants must also provide a $25 gift card to be used in a giveaway to help promote the week.

Participation fees help cover the cost of promotional materials used throughout the program, like posters, brochures, buttons, tabletop signs and Restaurant Week advertising.

The deadline for restaurants to register is Feb. 16. The website stjrestaurantweek.com will be published with participating restaurants and their menus after the registration deadline.

“Please encourage your favorite restaurants to participate,” Hawn said. “We do this as a way to encourage local spending in what can be a slow time of year for restaurants.”

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One Class at a Time: Desert Mirage High School chemistry teacher surprised with $777.77 for classroom, community work

Garrett Hottle

THERMAL, Calif. (KESQ) What began as a simple walk down a school hallway turned into an emotional surprise for a Desert Mirage High School chemistry teacher whose impact reaches far beyond the classroom.

As part of News Channel 3’s One Class at a Time series, students and school officials joined representatives from Walter Clark Legal Group to surprise chemistry teacher Ms. Chino with a $777.77 check to support her work.

Ms. Chino was nominated by former student Erik Huerta, who studied under her in Chemistry Honors and AP Chemistry during his sophomore and junior years. Huerta is now headed to Columbia University.

In his nomination letter, Huerta described Chino as “the best teacher on our campus,” citing not only her dedication to academics, but her commitment to making students feel valued and capable.

“Her passion for teaching and her commitment to making every student feel valued and capable are truly inspiring,” Huerta wrote.

Chino teaches chemistry at Desert Mirage High School, where she currently leads a dual enrollment course in partnership with College of the Desert, allowing students to earn college credit while still in high school.

“I know chemistry has a bad reputation of being very difficult,” Chino said. “But I am so passionate about it. I’m just trying to share a little bit of that with them.”

The surprise included a check for $777.77, which Chino said she plans to use to support her classroom, including lab equipment she has previously purchased out of pocket.

Outside the classroom, Chino also leads the Paw Patrol Club, a student organization focused on raising funds and providing support for animal shelters across the Coachella Valley. The club organizes donation drives, fundraisers and community outreach, and helps care for rescued and stray animals.

Walter Clark Legal Group representatives said the award was intended to support not just Chino’s classroom, but the broader impact she has on students and the community.

Chino credited her students for the recognition, saying their hard work and passion continue to inspire her as an educator.

A teacher shaping futures, one student, one class and one surprise at a time.

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FAA investigating complaint against City of St. Joseph for alleged violations of airport bid practices

Cameron Montemayor

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Federal regulators are investigating a complaint filed by a local airport group alleging the City of St. Joseph violated federal grant regulations and bidding processes by improperly awarding an airport lease to one company last September. 

Officials with the Federal Aviation Administration on Jan. 13 notified and requested the City respond to allegations in a complaint filed by local entrepreneur Lute Atieh, alleging the city violated as many as five federal grant assurances by improperly awarding a Rosecrans airport lease to Pan-Am Flight Services last September. 

FAA grant assurances are legally binding, long-term obligations that airport sponsors like the City must agree to when accepting federal funds to support operations. 

Atieh, who is representing his bidding group St. Joseph Air Center and company FlyTech Pilot Academy, as well as several concerned airport tenants, claims the city failed on multiple occasions to properly evaluate airport bid proposals — among a wide range of allegations — and let internal pressure campaigns by bidders and city officials heavily sway the selection of an alleged inferior bid, this coming despite internal documents showing his proposal rated the highest on at least one full round of scoring. 

“If the FAA finds merit to my complaint, the city may be required to correct the process and address any compliance issues to protect future FAA funding,” Atieh told News-Press NOW. “This is a city airport, but federal dollars come with federal obligations, and those obligations are not optional.”

The city has until Feb. 12 to provide a response to the allegations according to the FAA’s notification letter, including the status of any attempts to resolve it, after which the FAA will review and either facilitate a resolution or move forward with a full investigation to determine potential noncompliance or dismissal. 

A spokesperson for the city declined to comment on the FAA’s request or allegations in the complaint, citing a pending legal matter. 

The FAA’s decision to move forward comes after an initial review of Atieh’s complaint to identify allegations requiring further investigation, including requests to the city to disclose administrative records related to the matter.    

Atieh was one of four entities who submitted bid proposals for a Fixed Based Operator lease at Rosecrans Memorial Airport last year, including Pan-Am Flight Services, the current awardee, and Apex Aero Center of Kansas City, the company initially awarded the bid. FBOs are entities authorized to provide specialized aircraft services for general, commercial and private aviation, including maintenance, refueling and providing hangar space. 

“This is not retail real estate. Running an airport operation requires regulatory compliance, specialized training, and deep industry experience,” Atieh said. “When proposals are evaluated using objective aviation criteria and expert input, the outcome should favor the most qualified operator, not the best connected. FAA oversight exists to keep the playing field level.” Atieh said his plan emphasized preserving existing facilities, with nearly $3.8 million in investments, rather than demolishing city structures to consolidate space for one tenant and displace more than a dozen tenants and operators.

The complaint alleges the bidding process and current plan with Pan-Am violates multiple grant regulations, including excessive consolidation of property and reducing or eliminating multiple independent aeronautical businesses — including his — without a workable transition plan, threatening fair prices and the continuity of key aviation services and opportunities for other business users. 

He said he’s not interested in being pushed out, instead he’s hoping to stand up for other concerned tenants and future entrepreneurs looking to make St. Joseph home.

Internal documents paint telling picture of bid process

Details on the FBO bid process spilled into public view last August when bidding groups, including Steve Craig on behalf of Pan-Am, raised concerns publicly to City Council about allegations of do-overs on scoring proposals following Apex Aero Center’s selection, raising doubts about which proposal was truly scored the highest. 

Of the four companies who bid for the FBO, documents show SJAC received the highest score among four of the five scoring panelists on at least one round of voting, an average score of 87 out of 100, except for one Aviation Board member, Chad Welch, who rated SJAC with a “0”, a drastically lower score compared with other evaluations.  

This document shows the second round of scoring for the Fixed Base Operator Lease at Rosecrans Memorial Airport.

On the other hand, Welch also gave Pan-Am a perfect “100” rating — something the complaint takes issue with. The “0” score reportedly resulted in the panelists’ removal from the selection process due to claims of bias. 

“Several panelists scored my proposal near the top, but one evaluator gave it a zero, which dramatically changed the outcome,” Atieh said. “When one outlier score can override the rest of the panel, it raises serious questions about fairness and whether the process is protected from bias.”

After appointing a new voting member, scoring documents for the second round of voting ended with SJAC scoring first. The scoring committee submitted a written recommendation to City Council for SJAC until the bid process was withdrawn and improperly re-initiated later according to the complaint, with Apex ultimately being selected.  

Less than a week after the City Council meeting, Apex Aero Center, a leading entity with multiple FBOs in the Midwest, withdrew from the planned agreement, a decision the complaint attributes to a campaign of pressure, citing multiple witnesses who heard the interactions. Not long after, Kansas City announced an agreement with Apex to develop a new $55 million FBO complex. 

Following Apex’s decision, the city pivoted to an agreement with Pan-Am Flight Services after City Councilmember Kenton Randolph sponsored a resolution directing city staff to negotiate a lease and operation agreement, which at this time is a non-binding agreement with plans for a 30,000-square-foot hangar and other aircraft facilities. 

Atieh contends his proposal would have generated more revenue for the city — particularly through a higher fuel tax — and helped preserve existing facilities as opposed to the current proposal, the details are which are likely to come to the forefront as the review unfolds and a full investigation potentially awaits. 

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Deschutes County seeks applicants for ‘sweat equity’ bin rentals, to dispose of wildfire fuels

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Deschutes County Natural Resources will begin accepting applications for its 2026 Sweat Equity Bin Rental Program on Sunday, Feb. 1.

Officials say the program helps local communities remove fire fuels and improve defensible spaces around homes and other structures by covering the cost of trash bin rentals.

Funds set aside for this year’s program will provide rental services to about 25 communities, the county said Thursday.

Eligibility Criteria:

Applicants must work at a neighborhood or community level to reduce wildfire risk. Individual properties are not eligible.

Preference goes to areas identified as having a high wildfire risk, but other review factors include:

Whether the neighborhood or community is a recognized Firewise USA ™ site or is working towards it

The number and/or size of properties participating

Whether the project’s focus is within the 100 ft. defensible space zone

Previous award of bin rental services: Priority is given to communities that haven’t received funding before, but all are encouraged to apply.

Selected neighborhoods and communities won’t receive funds directly. Instead, Deschutes County will manage bin rental contracts with disposal companies and work directly with communities to mitigate wildfire risks.

Communities that are interested in applying for a bin rental service award are asked to submit an application between Feb. 1 and Feb. 28. Recipients will be notified in early April.

For more information about the Sweat Equity Bin Rental Program, please visit the Natural Resources website.

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Demolition begins on Madison Street Parking Garage

Ryan Shiner

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

Demolition began Wednesday on the Madison Street Parking Garage in downtown Jefferson City, the city shared on social media.

Crews began closing off the area over the weekend and the garage was closed down in December. A city spokesperson told ABC 17 News that demolition is expected to be complete by May 5.  

Jefferson City Council in November approved a $2.1 million amendment to its agreement with McCown Gordon Construction to move forward with demolition, according to the city.

Pedestrian access in the 200 block of East Commercial Way is open, while vehicle access is closed, according to information from the city.

Once the parking garage is down, the city can then start constructing a new conference center and hotel.

The city previously said more than 900 on-street parking spaces and several off-street lots will be available as the parking garage is demolished.

Other buildings in the area – including the old Jefferson City News Tribune building at 210 Monroe St. in 2024 —were knocked down in preparation for building the new conference center, hotel and more public parking. Design plans were outlined in September.

Additionally, the City Council this week approved the creation of the Downtown Jefferson City Conference Center Transportation Development District, which would allow for a 1% sales tax “to assist in the funding of public improvements, blight remediation activities and other services within the District.” Previous reporting says it primarily would be used for transportation improvements for the downtown conference center.

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