High Desert Food & Farm Alliance makes $25,000 in on-farm efficiency grants to support local agriculture

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — The High Desert Food & Farm Alliance is investing $25,000 in 10 Central Oregon farms this winter through its On-Farm Efficiency Grant program, supporting projects that promote efficient, sustainable practices with lasting environmental and community impact.

Grant recipients will use the grant funding – up to $3,000 to each recipient – for a range of projects designed to extend the growing season, promote environmental stewardship and improve operational efficiencies, the organization said Monday.

“These investments play a critical role in sustaining small farms and bolstering Central Oregon’s food system,” HDFFA said in the news release that continues in full below: 

As Sam Shafer of Amethyst Organics, a 2026 grant recipient shared, “Given Central Oregon’s short growing season and unpredictable weather events, this investment is not just an improvement – it’s a mandatory step to secure economic and climate resilience for our operation.”

Grant programs like OFEG play a critical role in supporting small- and mid-sized farms, which often face narrow profit margins and limited access to traditional financing.

Rising input costs, climate uncertainty, and infrastructure needs can make essential improvements out of reach, even when those investments would significantly increase a farm’s efficiency and resilience.

By offering flexible, producer-informed funding, HDFFA helps remove barriers to investment and meets farmers where they are. 

These grants reflect a shared commitment to supporting Central Oregon’s agricultural community, ensuring that locally grown and produced food remains available to our region for years to come.

HDFFA extends heartfelt congratulations to the 2026 On-Farm Efficiency Grant recipients and sincere gratitude for their leadership in strengthening and nourishing our community. 

Below is a brief overview of the 2026 On-Farm Efficiency Grant–funded projects and the innovative ways local farmers are strengthening sustainability, efficiency, and resilience across Central Oregon.

Amethyst Organics, a new farm in Bend, will build a greenhouse and fertility systems to extend the growing season, increase productivity, reduce water use, and improve soil health.

The Crow’s Croft is upgrading to a large upright freezer, which will improve efficiency, cut food waste and emissions, and ensure consistent, high-quality pork and lard production. 

Fibonacci Farm is upgrading their tomato trellising system and investing in a flame weeder, which will increase production efficiencies and support long-term sustainability of the farm.

Fields Farm is building a propagation greenhouse that will double plant-starting capacity with reclaimed materials, improving germination efficiency while minimizing environmental impact.

Juniper Hollow Homestead is improving multi-species rotational grazing systems with fencing and tractor repair, which improves pasture health and livestock welfare practices.

Lost Grace Farm is building a solar-powered outbuilding for year-round hatching, brooding, and plant starting, sustainably extending the farm’s production season.

Over Yonder Farm, a new farm in Sisters, is building hoop houses, extending the growing season, increasing efficiency, supporting climate resilience, and bolstering environmental health.

Red Dog Farm is upgrading wash-pack infrastructure, improving food safety, efficiency, and capacity to meet restaurant and community needs.

Root Down Acres is purchasing a mobile aluminum chicken coop, which provides security for pastured hens, reduces feed loss, protects against disease, and enables rotational grazing.

Sage and Stone Butchery is upgrading their poultry-processing facility with transport crates, ice machines, and a closed-loop wastewater system.

HDFFA’s 2026 On-Farm Efficiency Grant was made possible by the generous support of a local community member. Community contributions are essential to ensure HDFFA can continue providing vital resources to Central Oregon farmers and ranchers through the On-Farm Efficiency Grant in the years ahead. To help support the 2027 OFEG grant cycle, please contact Executive Director Kristin Points at kristin@hdffa.org.

HDFFA is a 501(c)3 non-profit serving Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson Counties as well as the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. HDFFA’s mission is to support a healthy and thriving food & farm network through education, collaboration, and inclusion. For more info visit hdffa.org

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Indio hosts for annual Presidents Day Parade

Jesus Reyes

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – People are celebrating the annual Presidents Day parade in Indio. Bands, cheerleaders, dance groups, police, firefighters, along with a number of community groups and dignitaries, marched or rolled through the downtown area Monday morning.

It was a slightly altered route due to ongoing construction on Oasis Street. The new route ended along Highway 111 near the Riverside County Fairgrounds.

Indio’s Mayor Elaine Holmes on just how much the city is growing.

“The downtown is fantastic. It is really quite wonderful, actually. There’s lots to do and places to eat and whatnot, but we have to be mindful of our businesses there. And so the idea is that as the route changes, more people come to the downtown and they look at what’s happening and what’s to come,” Holmes said.

News Channel 3 First Alert Meteorologist Katie Boer was there saying hello to the crowds along with our sister station Telemundo’s weather anchor Mayra Perez and Sammy Bernal from radio station La Poderosa 96.7.

The holiday honors our nation’s presidents. The holiday originally celebrated our first president, George Washington’s birthday, but was changed in 1970 to give federal employees a three-day holiday weekend and include all presidents.

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New timeline, digital evidence raise questions after arrest in T’Neya Tovar investigation

Garrett Hottle

SALTON CITY, CALIF. (KESQ) – New digital evidence and new timeline details in the murder investigation of 17-year-old T’Neya Tovar.

Tovar was reported missing on December 1 in the Salton City area.

Abraham Feinbloom, 51, was arrested Friday on suspicion of murdering a missing Hemet teenager after investigators say he attempted to flee when a SWAT team executed a search warrant at a Salton City home.

The arrest comes nearly eleven weeks after the disappearance of T’Neya “TT” Tovar, a 17‑year‑old from Hemet known for her creative spirit and big personality.

Tovar’s mother, Charro Tovar, filed a missing‑person report on December 1, telling authorities her daughter had traveled to Palm Springs and stopped answering her phone. Charro and Tovar’s father, Josh Carter, say they later learned she planned to meet Feinbloom, a 51‑year‑old man living in a boarded‑up pink house on Harlequin Court.

Partial remains discovered

On December 21, deputies responded to a field near Portsmouth Avenue and Newhaven Court in the Vista Del Mar area of Salton City after someone reported finding human remains. They recovered a decomposed human leg but could not determine its sex, age or race. The remains were sent to a forensic pathologist, and investigators worked for weeks to develop a DNA profile.

Investigators received a positive female DNA match on February 6 and contacted Tovar’s mother for a sample. Rapid testing confirmed the remains belonged to T’Neya Tovar. The Sheriff’s Office publicly confirmed the identification on February 12.

Neighbors’ warnings and a delayed search

In the weeks after Tovar disappeared, Charro and Carter repeatedly drove 70 miles to the Salton City address to request welfare checks. They say deputies knocked but never forced entry and suggested T’Neya might be a runaway. Neighbors described hearing drums, seeing bright lights and occasional screams coming from the house. One neighbor, Jessica Guirron, told News Channel 3 that the family nicknamed Feinbloom “the scary man in the scary house” and that a forensic truck had visited the property in 2015. Another neighbor, Imari Kariotis, said residents began watching the house after December 21 and noticed Feinbloom installing security cameras on December 23.

On February 6, the same day investigators matched the DNA, agents with the FBI and the Imperial County Sheriff’s Office executed a search warrant at the Harlequin Court property. They knocked on doors and showed neighbors a picture of the man believed to be involved. Residents say the occupant never came outside. A week later, authorities returned with a SWAT team and arrested Feinbloom after he attempted to jump a fence.

What we know about Abraham Feinbloom

Public records list Feinbloom as a musician who had lived at the Harlequin Court home for years. Neighbors said the house was boarded up and surrounded by a pink cinder‑block wall. According to county property records, the deed remained in the name of his deceased parents; neighbors say he continued to live there without transferring ownership. The Sheriff’s Office has not released a motive or said how Feinbloom and Tovar met. Friends of Tovar told her mother they saw the pair together at a transit station in Los Angeles in October, suggesting their relationship may have begun months earlier.

Unanswered questions

Only a portion of Tovar’s remains have been recovered. Investigators have not disclosed a cause of death or said whether anyone else was involved. Charro Tovar questions why deputies waited more than six weeks to test the leg found in December and why multiple wellness checks never resulted in a search warrant. She said she gave investigators Feinbloom’s name, birth date and address early in December and feels her concerns were dismissed because her daughter was on probation. “If they had acted sooner, maybe my child could have been saved,” she said in an interview with News Channel 3.

The Imperial County Sheriff’s Office described the case as a multi‑agency investigation and urged anyone with information to contact Investigator Moreno at (442) 265‑2265. The FBI is offering a $10,000 reward for tips leading to a resolution.

A Mother’s Pleas

Charro Tovar began posting about her daughter’s disappearance on Facebook in early December. In a Dec. 5 post she begged friends to share T’Neya’s photo and called the situation “urgent.” By Christmas, she wrote that her daughter had been missing for 25 days and that authorities still had not searched the house on Harlequin Court. Her posts continued through January and February, with increasingly desperate appeals for help and criticism of law enforcement. Charro says she read every rumor, chased every lead and personally contacted the FBI, multiple sheriff’s departments and national organizations. She credits the Salton City community for sharing surveillance videos and tips and says she will not rest until her daughter is fully recovered and justice is served.

TIMELINE

December 1, 2025 – Last Contact

Dec. 1, 2025 – T’Neya vanishes. The 17‑year‑old, headstrong and full of energy, calls her mother, Charro Tovar, to say she is heading to Palm Springs. She promises to return in two weeks but never comes home. That night her phone stops sharing its location. Her parents – Charro and Josh Carter – soon learn she planned to meet a man they did not know. Friends later tell Charro they had seen T’Neya with an older man at the 7th and Metro transit center in Los Angeles in October. It may have been the first time she met Abraham Feinbloom.

December 1–20, 2025 – Frantic Search

Charro and Josh act as detectives. They file a missing‑person report with the Imperial County Sheriff’s Office (ICSO) and repeatedly drive to Harlequin Court in Salton City – the address T’Neya’s phone last pinged. Deputies accompany them on four wellness checks. They pound on the gates of a boarded‑up pink house but the occupant never answers. Officers question neighbors and ask whether T’Neya is a runaway or on drugs. Charro insists this is out of character for her daughter. She shares digital evidence, including T’Neya’s TikTok video showing an arm believed to be Feinbloom’s, and begs authorities to search the property. Neighbors remember seeing T’Neya on the street Dec. 1 but never again.

December 21, 2025 – Remains Discovered

A decomposed leg is found. Deputies respond at 4:22 p.m. to a field near Portsmouth Avenue and Newhaven Court in the Vista Del Mar area of Salton City after reports of human remains. They recover a human leg but cannot determine the sex, age or race. The remains are sent to a forensic pathologist. Charro calls the county coroner on December 23 asking if the leg could be T’Neya’s. She is told the limb appears to belong to a white or Hispanic adult. That same week neighbors notice the occupant at Harlequin Court installing several security cameras around his property – after investigators had already visited. The case goes quiet during the holidays.

December 23, 2025 – Added Security and Community Vigilance

Neighborhood on edge. Neighbors of the pink house call him “the scary man in the scary house.” They report hearing drums, seeing bright lights at night and never getting a good look at the man who rarely left his home. A forensic truck had visited his property back in 2015, neighbors say, in connection with another missing girl. After investigators’ December visit, they notice he installs multiple security cameras and reinforces the walls. Residents begin watching the house, sharing information via text and social media, and even flying a paraglider overhead to get photographs for Charro. One neighbor, Imari Kariotis, tells us the community feels Imperial County officials “dropped the ball.”

February 6, 2026 – Break in the Case

DNA match and first search. After weeks of testing, the Sheriff’s Scientific Investigations Unit receives a positive female DNA match from the leg. Investigators call Charro and ask for her DNA; rapid testing confirms the remains belong to T’Neya. On the same day, FBI agents and sheriff’s detectives execute a search warrant at the house on Harlequin Court. They knock on neighbors’ doors asking if anyone has seen a young woman or heard screaming. One neighbor recounts FBI agents showed her a photo of a man; she recognized his truck but the agents refused to leave her with a picture. Another neighbor says she saw T’Neya’s TikTok clip showing someone’s arm inside the house. The occupant refuses to answer the door.

February 11–12, 2026 – Public Confirmation

Confirmation goes public. On February 11, Charro posts on Facebook that the Imperial County Coroner has confirmed the leg belongs to her daughter. News Channel 3 reports the news, but authorities do not immediately release the information. The following day, the Sheriff’s Office formally confirms that the remains recovered in December are T’Neya’s. The case becomes a

February 13, 2026 – The Arrest

SWAT moves in. At 7:30 a.m., the Imperial County Sheriff’s Emergency Response Team, joined by FBI agents, serves a second search warrant at Harlequin Court. As officers approach, 51‑year‑old Abraham Feinbloom jumps a fence and tries to run. He is immediately caught and turned over to the FBI for questioning. Deputies process the property for evidence and eventually arrest Feinbloom on suspicion of murder and resisting a peace officer. He is booked into jail without bail. In a press release, the Sheriff’s Office thanks the FBI, Riverside County Sheriff’s Office and District Attorney’s Office for their work and offers condolences to T’Neya’s family.

February 13, 2026 – A Mother’s Relief and Grief

Charro’s voicemail. Minutes after the arrest, Charro calls our newsroom and leaves an emotional voicemail: “SWAT and FBI are at Abraham’s house to arrest him … Thank God that he has been arrested already”. Despite relief, she still demands answers. Only part of her daughter’s remains have been recovered. She wants to know why investigators waited more than two months to test the DNA and why repeated wellness checks failed to produce a search warrant.

February 15, 2026 – Parents Speak Out

Exclusive interview. In a sit‑down with News Channel 3, Charro Tovar and Josh Carter describe their anguish. They explain that deputies originally asked whether T’Neya was a runaway or on drugs and did not request Charro’s DNA until February 6. Charro says she personally conducted online research and provided deputies with Feinbloom’s name, birth date and address. She says the delay in confirming the leg prevented her from mourning sooner. Josh calls Feinbloom a “ghost” who hid behind boarded‑up windows and warns that there may be other victims. Charro praises the Salton City community for sharing surveillance videos and tips and vows to keep pushing until her daughter’s body is found.

The FBI said it is offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to a resolution of the case.

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Cathedral City offers free sandbags amid storm, yoga classes canceled Tuesday

Jesus Reyes

CATHEDRAL CITY, Calif. (KESQ) – With a winter rainstorm impacting the Coachella Valley, the Cathedral City Fire & EMS Department is reminding residents that free, self-serve sandbags are available at the fire station located at 32100 Desert Vista Rd., Cathedral City.

Limited quantities of empty sandbags are available at all CALFIRE/Riverside County Fire Stations. Find your nearest Riverside County fire station here.

Residents are encouraged to take proactive steps to protect their property from potential flooding. Sandbags are available on a first-come, first-served basis.

The city also announced that Tuesday’s free yoga classes at the Cathedral City Community Amphitheater have been canceled due to the weather. Classes are expected to resume the following Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026.

A First Alert Weather Alert has been issued for the storm. Download the News Channel 3 First Alert Weather App for up-to-the-minute updates.

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Highway 20 reopens near Santiam Pass after injury car-semi crash brings closure, long backups of holiday travelers

Barney Lerten

(Update: Initial OSP details; highway cleared)

SISTERS, Ore. (KTVZ) — An injury crash involving a car and a semi-truck closed U.S. Highway 20 just east of Santiam Pass for about two hours Monday afternoon, and holiday travelers encountered long backups in both directions.

The crash was reported around 12:35 p.m. at milepost 79.5, a mile east of the summit, according to ODOT TripCheck. ODOT advised drivers that the road was closed due to the crash and advised them to use an alternate route.

Oregon State Police Captain Kyle Kennedy told KTVZ News the initial report was that “a passenger vehicle possibly lost control and struck a commercial motor vehicle (truck).”

At least one person was taken by ambulance to St. Charles Bend, Kennedy said Kennedy expected to have more information after the on-scene investigation concludes.

Highway 20 closure mapInjury crash just east of Santiam Pass Monday afternoon brought closure, long holiday traffic backups in both directions.

Unconfirmed first-responder reports from the scene indicated the highway’s westbound lane was going to reopen about an hour later and that a Life Flight helicopter on stand by was no longer needed.

A long traffic backup in both directions could be seen until around 2:40 p.m. on the highway’s TripCheck cameras, as many Presidents Day motorists traveled between Central Oregon and the Willamette Valley.

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Columbia City Council approves new design of Douglass Park basketball courts

Nia Hinson

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Columbia City leaders unanimously approved a new design to the Douglass Park basketball courts during Monday night’s council meeting.

The city had been having discussions about changing the basketball courts since 2023. It was announced in 2023 that the courts would honor Willie Cox, a former assistant coach of the University of Missouri women’s basketball team who died in 2019. Cox also hosted basketball camps at Douglass Park.

Columbia Parks and Recreation voted last month to move forward with an alternative design, after residents pushed back on earlier design concepts claiming it focused too much on the university. The two courts will now be painted blue and gray with white court lines. The west court will also include “Douglass Bulldogs” on each baseline, while the east court will include “Moonlight Hoops – Est. 1989.”

Several residents from the public thanked the city for their willingness to listen to their concerns throughout the process, and expressed the need for additional security at the park. Mayor Barbara Buffaloe also thanked residents for their tenacity in speaking up.

Parks and Recreation Director Gabe Huffington also told the council on Monday that the department intends to install a water fountain with a bottle filler on the east side of the basketball court. That would require an additional $10,000 in park sales tax funding. The water fountain would be open from April through October each year, according to city documents.

Huffington also said Monday night the city is planning to have additional public engagement about the park in 2026. Discussions regarding additional security at the park will be included within those, he said.

Columbia resident Anthony Johnson was vocal throughout the discussions about ensuring the park’s history was preserved through the new design. He told ABC 17 News before Monday night’s vote he would be in favor of the new design. He said he grew up in Columbia and remembers playing on the courts as a child, something he described as a place of unity for the community.

For Johnson, the new design of the courts is bigger than basketball.

“If you look back at the history of Columbia we were segregated, this area down here, this downtown area…this is where the Black people had to live. Our businesses, our homes like this was our community,” Johnson said.

Johnson said he’s excited to re-build the park and some of the programs the city used to have at it. He said discussions are continuing about bringing back Moonlight Hoops.

According to city documents, the theme and the color blue were the most-popular ideas presented by residents during the public engagement portion of the project.

Columbia Resident Stephen Cooper said he’s lived in Columbia his entire life and remembers playing basketball on the courts daily as a child. He said including the name “Douglass Bulldogs” on the court was fitting.

“This is history. You know, it goes way back. A lot of us come up through the projects down there so if you would name it anything else, there’s no history there,” Cooper said.

Renovations will cost roughly $900,000, with funding from the University of Missouri, the Veterans United Foundation and the 2021 Park Sales Tax. Planned upgrades also include new rims, LED lighting and a park shelter.

According to the city, $495,000 will come from a 2023 fiscal year grant, $321,000 will come from the park sales tax and $100,000 is being sourced from donations. Improvements to the courts are expected to begin immediately after approval and must be completed by September 2026 to meet grant requirements, according to Huffington.

Johnson said he believes the most important part of the process is that it was a community-led project. He said the process serves as a stepping stone for him and is hopeful the changes send a message.

“I hear so much they don’t listen to us so what’s the point of wasting our time? That’s people’s reasons for not voting, for not showing up for different things,” Johnson said. “So, this was a process that was done and we came together and expressed how we felt about it and were able to get a different outcome.”

Documents also state that Parks and Recreation has met with funding donors who want to add a Mizzou-themed basketball court honoring Cox in an alternate park location in the city. A decision on that will be made after the city finishes improvements to the Douglass Park courts, Huffington said.

Douglass park council docDownload

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Man seriously injured in Sunday morning Saline County crash

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 32-year-old man from Sweet Springs, Missouri, was seriously injured Sunday morning in a crash on Highway 127 at 157th Road in Saline County, according to a crash report from the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

The report says the man was driving a 1999 Toyota Avalon southbound when it went off the road, hit a ditch and overturned.

The man was not wearing a seatbelt and he was brought to Centerpoint Medical Center by ambulance, the report says.

The Toyota was totaled. MSHP reports do not name those involved in crashes.  

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Storm Drenches SLO County With More Than An Inch of Rain Monday Morning

Dave Alley

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (KEYT) – The arrival of a significant winter storm drenched the Central Coast Monday morning with heavy rainfall, including San Luis Obispo County.

“We’ve seen a lot of heavy rain activity,” said Scotty Jalbert, San Luis Obispo County Emergency Services Director. “This morning started very early by, I believe the 9 a.m. we saw up to at least one inch in North County, which is a good amount of rain for us.”

As of early Monday afternoon, San Luis Obispo County was wet, but according to Jalbert, had avoided any severe impacts from the storm.

“Fortunately, we’ve not had any significant issues with that heavy rainfall,” said Jalbert. “But that just is going to lead into other things for the rest of the week.”

With rainfall expected to last for the next few days, Jalbert indicated the county is keeping a close eye on a handful of troublespot locations, including Arroyo Grande Creek, Avila Drive and the Salinas River.

“We’re in a monitoring stage,” said Jalbert. “We have a heightened alert due to the weather, especially with the thunderstorm activities that we’re expecting. We will be monitoring throughout the day and throughout the night, especially in this next series of storms that start tomorrow. With that, the grounds being saturated we can expect a little more problems with maybe localized flooding, trees coming down with power lines and so forth.”

As of late Monday afternoon, rain totals topped more than an inch across the county. Totals included mountain areas between two to 3.5″ inches”, Santa Margarita 1.93″, San Luis Obispo 1.72″, Paso Robles 1.62″, Morro Bay 1.40 inches, Lopez Lake 1.47″, Nipomo 1.24″, Grover Beach 1.23″, Arroyo Grande 1.22″.

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Mexican federal judge orders release of Juárez crematorium owner, where nearly 400 bodies were found

Heriberto Perez Lara

JUÁREZ, Chihuahua (KVIA) — A Mexican federal judge ordered the immediate release over the weekend of José Luis A.C., the former owner of the infamous “Crematorio Plenitud,” where approximately 386 bodies were found in Juárez last year.

Judge Luis Eduardo Rivas of the Seventh District Court granted an injunction to the crematorium owner, a decision described by family members as an “atrocity that tears apart the social fabric.”

ABC-7 reported last June that local, state, and federal authorities in Mexico discovered the 386 bodies and that proper funeral services had not been provided to the families who had paid for services at the ‘Plenitud’ crematorium.

The Chihuahua Attorney General’s Office (FGE Chihuahua) held a press conference over the weekend, during which Chihuahua Attorney General César Jáuregui Moreno demanded an immediate review of the injunction after the owner, José Luis A.C., was released from state custody in Juárez.

ABC-7 spoke today with a representative of the group of victims’ family members and with the spokeswoman for the ‘Colectivo Justicia para nuestros dedudos,’ Dora Elena Delgado, after the decision was made last Friday.

“It saddens me because I am from Chihuahua, because I am a Juárez resident by choice, that an institution has these deficiencies, this lack of credentials, and that this lack of credentials affects more than 1,500 families, whose lives were somehow changed by a piece of news. Right?” said Delgado.

“We don’t want to be part of that index (of unsolved cases in Mexico), those statistics, those numbers, because of the lack of justice, because of the lack of effectiveness of the A.G.’s office,” Delgado added. “I mean, this is a national and international issue. Imagine the real shame. Beyond the indignation, the anger, the frustration, the disappointment we feel seeing in the press that no governing body has been appointed to address the cover-up, the fraud committed by this man, all of that; it’s shameful, I find it shameful.”

The Chihuahua Attorney General’s Office said they will be demanding a review of the case following Arellano’s release and will file an appeal, and complaints will be filed with the judges of the Federal Judiciary and the Oversight Bodies to overturn the injunction and review the judge’s actions.

Chihuahua Attorney General Jáuregui recalled that a similar request for an injunction had previously been received in that same court on behalf of the same person, but with a different judge; however, it was denied because the bodies had been piling up for months without proper handling, under unsanitary conditions, and in a state of decomposition, which posed a risk to the Juárez community.

“What have we proven? That there were 386 corpses without proper treatment, that they had been in that place not for days, not for months, but for years, under the most unsanitary conditions, and we proved that the families were given funeral urns containing remains that did not belong to their loved ones,” A.G. Jáuregui said.

Attorney General Jáuregui also explained that the Federal Judge who granted the injunction focused on two issues, namely the verbs that define the crimes, which are “to conceal” and “to preserve,” which he considered did not apply in this case, since the bodies “were not hidden.”

FGE stated that the evidence points to clear intent in the accumulation of the bodies, since the families who paid for the service were not receiving the ashes of their loved ones.

“Faced with such a ruling, there is no option but to fight it; the A.G.’s Office will immediately file two appeals: an appeal for review before the judges of the Federal Judiciary, so that they may overturn this injunction and return things to their current state; and, secondly, a complaint before the Oversight Bodies of the Judiciary itself, so that the judge’s actions may be reviewed,” A.G. Jáuregui added.

Delgado states that the prosecution demonstrated great incompetence in this case, as she believes that Arellano’s release should not have happened in the first place.

“I was talking about the incompetence of a weak institution (FGE), but there’s also a word that we shout in the slogans of the demonstrations we do: corruption, we think of corruption; that is, you have to have money for justice to solve your problems?” Delgado added. “This case of the Plenitud crematorium is a brutal institutional silence and the institutional silence is also insulting.”

“Y yo creo que las instituciones deben de estar fuertes, pero para que las instituciones estén fuertes, las personas tienen que ser no corruptas, que no permitan la impunidad,

The Chihuahua Attorney General’s Office has identified 191 of the 386 bodies found last year, of which only 185 have been returned to their families; 152 DNA tests have been carried out, the results of which will be received in the coming days, the FGE said in a statement.

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Dark Santa Maria Skies Rumble As Rain And Thunder Push Through

Jarrod Zinn

SANTA MARIA, Calif. (KEYT) – An afternoon thunderstorm darkened the sky above Santa Maria and rumbled through.

Santa Maria held up nicely.

Earlier, a downpour ushered in the start of Santa Maria’s work week, creating slick streets and flooded corners–drivers making use of their wipers and headlights for the morning commute.

“At this point, as far as our office is aware, we have made it through the initial band of, rain pretty well,” says Stacy Silva, Associate Director for Santa Barbara County’s Office of Emergency Management.

Another band of rain flowed through town just after lunch.

“As far as I can tell, we’ve really seen the more significant numbers in our north westerly parts of Santa Barbara County, as it pertains to the rain totals so far,” says Silva.

Flash flooding closed portions of roadways throughout the day, including Black Road between Santa Maria and Guadalupe, Highway 1 just outside Orcutt, and rosemary road between Betteravia and Stowell.

“All of our public safety partners—fire, law, and public works—across the county, really, are prepared and in many cases pre-positioned to respond in the event that this storm brings additional threat,” says Silva.

No major incidents have been reported in the northern parts of Santa Barbara County, but emergency preparedness alerts have been issued for most of the Central Coast.

“Turn around, don’t drown,” says Silva. “Don’t try and attempt to drive through flooded streets. If you see flooded roads or streets, do not attempt to cross them, even in a vehicle. We’re likely to see increased storm impacts as we get later into the week, so our communities should remain prepared for that.”

Highway 1 near Orcutt remains closed to through-traffic for now.

Officials remind the public to sign up or update your information for real-time alerts on Readysbc.org.

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