FBI confirms investigation into missing teen last seen in Thermal

Jesus Reyes

THERMAL, Calif. (KESQ) – The FBI officially confirmed on Tuesday that it is investigating the disappearance of a Hemet teenager last seen in December heading to Thermal.

T’neya Tovar, also known as “TT” Tovar, has been missing since December 1, 2025. Investigators said she was last seen in Thermal.

On Friday, FBI investigators were out at a home on Harlequin Court, just off the 86 Expressway, in Thermal. News Channel 3 crew at the scene saw law enforcement with tools heading into the property.

The address investigators were at on Friday has been mentioned as a possible connection with Tovar’s disappearance, according to a flyer by her family.

Investigators believe Tovar traveled more than 70 miles to Thermal and believe that she left to possibly meet up with an adult male. Her mother says that she always shared her location with her mother and kept in contact with friends and that stopped the day she went missing.

Neighbors told News Channel 3’s Garrett Hottle on Monday that agents canvassed the area and asked questions related to Tovar’s disappearance, but law enforcement did not confirm whether the search was tied to a missing persons investigation.

Tovar is described as 5 foot, 6 inches tall, 129 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes. She has a tattoo on her left hand.

The FBI is asking anyone with information to contact investigators at 1 800 CALL-FBI.

We’ll have the latest on the investigation starting at 4 p.m. on News Channel 3.

Statement from Tovar’s father:

“Our daughter, T’Neya, is a 17-year-old who has been missing since December 1st from Hemet, California. Her disappearance is completely out of character. She was in regular contact with her family and friends, had plans she did not miss, and then suddenly all communication stopped.

I can confirm that law enforcement executed a search warrant connected to T’Neya’s case. We are grateful that agencies are continuing to take this seriously and are working together.

Out of respect for the investigation, I won’t discuss details or speculate about what that activity means.

What I do want people to understand is this: T’Neya is a child. She is loved, she is missed, and she matters. Online speculation and rumors are harmful and do not help bring someone home.

The most important way the community can help right now is by sharing accurate information and directing any tips to law enforcement or the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Our family is asking for prayers, privacy, respect, and continued awareness as we wait for answers.”

Stay with News Channel 3 for continuing updates.

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Jimmy Eat World takes ‘Bleed American’ on tour, performing the iconic album live at Hayden Homes Summer 2026

KTVZ – News Team

LOS ANGELES, Ca. (KTVZ) — The Arizona rock band Jimmy Eat World announced a North American tour on Tuesday to celebrate the 25th anniversary of their album “Bleed American.” The tour is scheduled to begin June 9, 2026, at the Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Denver and will conclude in November 2026 at the Vans Warped Tour in Orlando, Fla.

The band will perform the entire “Bleed American” album during the tour, which marks their return to the Vans Warped Tour stage after a 25-year absence. Originally released in 2001, the album has been certified platinum in the United States and features the hit single “The Middle.” The tour follows a series of sold-out performances in the United Kingdom scheduled for August 2026.

The tour is promoted by Live Nation and includes a stop at the Hayden Homes Amphitheater in Bend, Ore., on July 17. The band will also perform at the Vans Warped Tour in five cities, marking their first appearance at the festival in 25 years. Other notable venues include the Brooklyn Paramount on June 16 and Chase Field in Phoenix on Sept. 6.

A rotating lineup of special guests will join the band on select dates throughout the North American trek. These artists include Rise Against, Motion City Soundtrack, Sunny Day Real Estate, Thrice, The Get Up Kids and Hot Mulligan. Additional performers such as Mom Jeans, Minus the Bear, PUP and Sparta are also scheduled for specific shows.

Lead vocalist and guitarist Jim Adkins said the band members are approaching the tour with a sense of gratitude that differed from their experience when the album first debuted. He noted that the group is still surprised by the long-term impact of the music.

“When we printed the last mix of Bleed American, we felt like we had achieved something great for ourselves,” Adkins said. “There was no barometer of how it would connect with people outside of the studio and we are still in awe with the life the record and songs have had since their original release.”

Adkins said the anniversary shows will feature updated production elements to reflect the band’s history. He described the tour as a way to celebrate the record’s connection with the audience.

“I feel like at this time in our lives, especially for me, it’s important to get back to a place that you can savor,” Adkins said. “This tour is designed to be an elevated version of our show, a heightened experience with production that reflects 25 years of learning how to stretch artistically in the live environment.”

Drummer Zach Lind said the tour serves as a way to show appreciation to fans who have supported the band’s career. The group intends to play the “Bleed American” album in its entirety along with other material.

The album “Bleed American” was released on July 24, 2001, through DreamWorks Records. Its most successful single, “The Middle,” reached No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 and earned a place in the Spotify Billion Streams Club in 2024. Billboard reported that the record helped the Arizona-based quartet achieve platinum success in the United States.

Several modern alternative and pop-rock artists have identified the album as a primary influence on their music. This list includes Fall Out Boy, Paramore, Dashboard Confessional and Taking Back Sunday. SPIN described the record as a lasting example of rock music from the era that resisted temporary trends.

Ticket presales for Citi and American Express cardmembers begin Wednesday, Feb. 11 at 10 a.m. local time. General ticket sales will open to the public on Friday, Feb. 13 at 10 a.m. local time through the band’s official website.

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Guns stolen in Fulton vehicle break-ins

Josie Anglin

FULTON, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Fulton Police Department is looking for one or more people after several vehicle break-ins overnight.

The Fulton Police Department said it received several reports of vehicle break-ins on Tuesday morning. Two of those reports included guns being stolen.

The thefts were reported on Court Street, Nichols Street, West Avenue, Center Street, Westminster Avenue and Crestwood Drive.

Fulton Police Chief Bill Ladwig said many of these thefts are from unlocked vehicles. He said residents should remember to lock their vehicles and take any valuables out of them.

The Fulton Police Department is asking residents to send in surveillance video of the thefts if they have it.

 

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Ride on the Desert Trail in late February

Marcos Icahuate

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – A local event to ride in the desert is planned for late February.

The 2nd annual Desert Trail will be on Saturday, February 21, 2026 at the Carefree Village Resort (3900 S. Ave. 8 1/2 E).

The event supports local veterans and first responders.

Lunch will be provided and a drawing will take place.

The ride is planned to last three hours, starting with sign-ups at 9:30 a.m.

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Home affordability trends up in Riverside County, statewide

City News Service

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (KESQ) – Housing affordability slightly improved in California in the fourth quarter of 2025, as moderating prices and cooling market competition lowered borrowing costs and allowed more Californians to qualify for mortgages, the California Association of Realtors announced today.

Eighteen percent of California households could afford to purchase the $869,300 median-priced home in the fourth quarter of 2025, up from 17% in third-quarter 2025 and 16% in fourth-quarter 2024, according to CAR.   

Those trends were mirrored in Riverside County, which improved to 24% from 23% in the third quarter, and from 21% in the fourth quarter of 2024. The numbers were identical for the Inland Empire region.  

CAR estimated the average monthly home payment including taxes and insurance in Riverside County was $3,880 in the fourth quarter, with a minimum qualifying income of $155,200.  

The statewide fourth-quarter 2025 figure is less than a third of the affordability index peak of 56% in the fourth quarter of 2012.   

Factors contributing to the decline include the effective interest rate dropping for the third consecutive quarter to its lowest level since third-quarter 2022. The average effective interest rate receded to 6.35% in fourth-quarter 2025 from 6.67% the previous quarter and was 41 basis points below the level 6.76% recorded a year earlier.   

Mortgage rates, which oscillated throughout the first six months of 2025 due partly to tariff-induced uncertainty, trended modestly lower in the second half of the year as the Federal Reserve’s expected rate cuts kick-started the decline.

The median price of an existing single-family home declined for the second straight quarter in the fourth quarter of 2025, falling 2.2% statewide as market competition cooled, typical for the year-end period.

Analysts said home prices should remain soft for the next couple of months but could rebound as the homebuying season begins in late March/early April.

Compared with California, 39% of the nation’s households could afford to purchase a $414,900 median-priced home, which required a minimum annual income of $101,600 to make monthly payments of $2,540, CAR said.

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Splash House announces 2026 dates, the Hilton replacing the Riviera as a host hotel

Jesus Reyes

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – Splash House will return to Palm Springs for its 13th year in August.

The 2026 poolside music festival will be held on Aug 7-9 and Aug. 14-16. Organizers announced that the Hilton will replace the Riviera as a host hotel while it undergoes summer renovations. The Renaissance, Saguaro, and Air Museum will return as host sites.

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Presale for passes will open on Feb. 17 at 1 p.m. PT.

The lineup will be announced at a later date. In the past few years, the lineup has been released in June.

For passes and more information, visit splashhouse.com.

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Statehouse roundup, 2.10.26: Launch fund transfers will cut student aid, director says

Kevin Richert

Originally posted on IdahoEdNews.org on February 10, 2026

by Kevin Richert and Ryan Suppe:

A $10 million transfer from the Idaho Launch fund would cut into student aid this year, the program’s director said Tuesday.

“We would have to curtail the number of awards that we make,” Wendi Secrist, executive director of the Workforce Development Council, told EdNews after a Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee presentation.

Wendi Secrist, executive director, Workforce Development Council

The $75 million-a-year Launch program provides high school graduates with up to $8,000 for college or career training. But Launch has long been a target of Statehouse conservatives — and in a cash-strapped 2026 session, the program will likely face another round of scrutiny.

On Monday, JFAC approved a pair of transfers from the In-Demand Careers Fund, which finances the Launch program. The first $10 million transfer would cover the current budget year, which ends June 30. The second $10 million would cover the next budget year — and the next round of Launch awards.

Secrist indicated that her department could cover the $10 million transfer this year, from personnel savings and from unused awards money. For next year, however, the timing and the math is more complicated.

Next year’s Launch budget covers awards for this year’s high school seniors. They can apply for Launch grants until April 15. So far, about 10,200 seniors have applied, Secrist said Tuesday.

If the state winds up awarding 9,000 grants — a reasonable forecast, based on how many applicants have used Launch money in past years — this would come to about $72.4 million. And this would exhaust the money in the fund for next year, Secrist said.

A $10 million fund transfer would come off the top, and that means the Workforce Development Council would award fewer grants this summer, Secrist said Tuesday.

“That’s what I was afraid of,” Sen. Janie Ward-Engelking, D-Boise, said during Tuesday’s JFAC hearing.

Ward-Engelking was one of two JFAC members who opposed Monday’s transfers. They passed on identical 18-2 votes.

Rep. Elaine Price, R-Coeur d’Alene

While Ward-Engelking decried a possible Launch budget cut, another JFAC member cast a skeptical eye toward continued funding. “Why should JFAC treat Launch as a proven?” said Rep. Elaine Price, R-Coeur d’Alene.

While Launch is in its infancy, Secrist said the program is already making a difference. She cited State Board of Education research which says Launch has improved Idaho’s post-high school go-on rates, while encouraging students to stay in state. But it will take time to measure outcomes — such as the number of Launch graduates who have gone into the workplace and stayed in Idaho.

“Right now, we’re showing outputs for the most part,” Secrist said.

Virtual school regulations easily clear House committee 

A bipartisan bill overhauling state regulations of virtual public schools cleared the House Education Committee with little debate Tuesday. 

Among other things, the proposal would limit eligible expenses for the “supplemental learning funds” that virtual schools offer parents. It comes after the Office of Performance Evaluations last year released a report that highlighted questionable uses of the funds by patrons of the Idaho Home Learning Academy (IHLA), the state’s largest virtual school. 

A handful of virtual school leaders spoke in support of the bill during a public hearing Tuesday. IHLA Superintendent Terri Sorensen said it balances accountability, transparency and parent choice, and she lauded the “collaborative spirit” of its legislative sponsors. 

“IHLA has been such a great, willing partner to recognize their need to change,” said sponsoring Rep. Douglas Pickett, “to change their policies, to gain wide, broad acceptance for what they’re doing.”

Rep. Doug Pickett, R-Oakley, speaks before the 2026 State of the State address. (Sean Dolan/EdNews)

Pickett, R-Oakley, is co-sponsoring the bill with Rep. Soñia Galaviz, a Boise Democrat and public school teacher, along with Rep. Clay Handy, R-Burley. 

The proposal, originally House Bill 588, will have a new bill number when it reaches the House floor. The co-sponsors introduced a replacement Tuesday that tweaked the language defining “supplemental learning funds.”

The new version would still limit eligible fund uses. Parents would be allowed to use them for education-related technology like laptops along with books, test fees, therapies and other expenses approved by the State Board of Education. 

The bill would also require additional transparency around private vendors that virtual schools contract with for online classes. Virtual schools would have to publicize the services the vendors provide, along with their costs. 

The bill would also require that virtual classes align with state content standards and that they’re taught by a state-certified instructor. 

One person — former state Sen. Steven Thayn of Emmett — spoke against the bill Tuesday. Thayn argued that the bill would restrict flexibility around the type of classes virtual schools offer. 

“The gold standard of school choice is parents being able to choose the curriculum,” he said. “Parents have more say into what curriculum is used. It might be more patriotic curriculum. They still have to meet the standards.”

Former Sen. Steven Thayn, R-Emmett

Galaviz said that the bill protects local control of curriculum. But, like any other public school, virtual school curriculum must be guided by state content standards, and virtuals must conduct standardized testing. 

“I feel very confident in saying that the Idaho Home Learning Academy wants to focus on kids,” she said. “We all want to make sure that we are ensuring academic success and growth.”

The committee unanimously voted to send the bill to the full House. 

House rejects Blaine Amendment repeal

The House voted down a proposal to use public dollars to fund religious education.

House Joint Resolution 7 would have repealed Idaho’s “Blaine Amendment,” which prohibits taxpayer support of religious-based schools or enterprises. The amendment, and similar language in other state constitutions, has become a focal point in the debate over private school choice.

“This is discrimination based on religion,” sponsoring Rep. Elaine Price, R-Coeur d’Alene, said of the Blaine Amendment.

However, Price also said the repeal itself wouldn’t affect any public funding; this would only occur later. She added that the amendment would simply put the question before voters, who must ratify any constitutional amendment.

No House member debated for or against the repeal, and it came up for an unexpectedly quick vote.

In the end, 41 House members voted for repeal, while 28 members voted no. However, constitutional amendments must pass each house with a two-thirds majority.

Nineteen Republicans joined the House’s nine Democrats in opposition.

IDLA budget cuts debut in House

Lawmakers got their first look Tuesday at a proposal to scale back state support for the Idaho Digital Learning Alliance. Gov. Brad Little proposed cutting 39% from the online learning platform. 

Rep. James Petzke’s proposal would make a hodgepodge of changes to IDLA’s $26 million state budget. It would: 

Reduce IDLA’s per-enrollment state allocation from $445 to $427. 

Limit yearly course enrollments to three per student.

Eliminate state funding for IDLA’s Elementary Launchpad program and driver’s education courses.

Prohibit private- and home-school students from receiving state funds for IDLA courses.

Cut state funding for “custom” IDLA sections in urban districts — courses in which all enrollments come from a single district in cities with more than 50,000 people. 

“It rightsizes their budget while minimizing the hurt to their core mission,” Petzke, R-Meridian, told the House Education Committee. “We’re not getting rid of the things that we think that IDLA does really well.”

Districts and charter schools could continue offering the courses targeted for cuts, Petzke noted. But the local school would take on responsibility for paying the fees — or passing on the costs to parents. 

The proposed reforms would reduce IDLA’s state funding by $8.96 million. This doesn’t include savings from excluding home-schoolers from the platform. These savings are difficult to project, Petzke said.

Rep. James Petzke, R-Meridian, listens to a presentation during at a Jan. 15 Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee meeting. (Sean Dolan/Idaho EdNews)

But the bill doesn’t explicitly address the IDLA budget issue that drawn scrutiny from lawmakers and Little. Rep. Kent Marmon, R-Caldwell, asked whether the bill tackles “double-dipping” — when brick-and-mortar schools collect state funds for a student who’s logged into an online course through IDLA. 

Petzke responded that the proposed changes will pull out some of the “double-funding.” But IDLA provides the content and teachers for the courses it offers to districts and charters, he said, so concerns should be addressed in the budgets for brick-and-mortar schools. 

“IDLA should be getting the money, not the districts,” Petzke said. “That’s a broader funding-formula question that I think that we need to tackle at some point.”

Petzke’s bill may not be the only one tackling IDLA’s budget this session. Rep. Clint Hostetler, R-Twin Falls, said Rep. Elaine Price, R-Coeur d’Alene, is working on a separate proposal. 

IDLA’s superintendent, Jeff Simmons, and other administrators from the agency worked with Petzke on the bill introduced Tuesday. 

“They don’t love it, as no agency would, right?” Petzke said. “This is a massive, massive cut to their budget. But they have seen it, and they do think this is the best path forward given the circumstances.”

New bill directs public schools to hold daily periods of silence

Public schools could soon be required to hold daily, one-minute periods of silence allowing students to “reflect, meditate, pray or engage in another silent activity.” 

Sponsoring Rep. Bruce Skaug told the House Education Committee that dozens of other states have enacted similar laws. A pastor and a rabbi approached Skaug with the proposal, the Nampa Republican said. 

“The silence isn’t religious or irreligious,” Skaug said. “You can pray, you can meditate or just think about your day.”

Committee members debated whether the bill should mandate the time of day that each period of silence must occur. The bill requires they be “at or near the beginning of each school day.”

Rep. Bruce Skaug, R-Nampa

Rep. Chris Mathias, D-Boise, moved to take out this provision of the bill and allow schools to conduct the exercise at any time of day. The motion failed on a 5-9 vote. 

Rep. Tony Wisniewski argued that a morning period of silence would “set the tone for the whole day.” Wisniewski, R-Post Falls, compared it to the House and Senate praying and reciting the Pledge of Allegiance at the beginning of each floor session, which establishes an “atmosphere” and “reverence.”

“If we leave it up to the teacher, and if a teacher is not in agreement with this principle, what could happen?” he said. “I have often said that if you can’t think like a criminal, you don’t belong in the Legislature.”

The committee voted to introduce Skaug’s bill, setting the stage for a future public hearing.

A divided House makes an appeal for special education funding

A nonbinding request for federal special education funding passed Tuesday, but over significant opposition.

House Joint Memorial 11 calls on Uncle Sam to cover 40% of special education costs — as promised with the 1975 passage of the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. The feds cover about 12% of Idaho’s special education costs, leaving the state and local schools to pick up the balance.

“This is a long overdue collection notice,” said Rep. Ben Fuhriman, R-Shelley, the memorial’s sponsor.

During brief debate, Rep. Lucas Cayler said the state shouldn’t demand more money from a federal government more than $38 trillion in the red. “I think everyone would agree that our federal debt is in a very, very bad place,” said Cayler, R-Caldwell.

The memorial passed on a 40-28 vote. Notably, five of the 10 members of the House Appropriations Committee — the budget-writing panel that writes up spending bills for K-12 — were among the opponents.

The memorial now heads to the Senate.

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Two Mile Prairie Elementary becomes partial lottery school

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Two Mile Prairie Elementary School will become a lottery school beginning in the 2026-27 school year, the Columbia Board of Education decided during Monday night’s meeting.

Meeting documents show the lottery system will only apply to “entry-level grades” including one kindergarten classroom and a number of seats in first grade. Students within the school’s attendance boundary do not need to participate in the lottery.

The application window opens on March 12, according to meeting documents.

Lottery schools in the district include Jefferson Middle School, Benton Elementary, Locust Street Elementary and Ridgeway Elementary.

“The decision to use a lottery only for the two youngest grades aims to manage capacity and introduce choice at the entry-level of Two Mile,” meeting documents say.

The decision will cost the district $20,000 for transportation and $65,000 to hire an additional teacher, the meeting agenda shows.  

Two Mile PrairieDownload

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41-year-old man arrested after stabbing in Palm Springs early Tuesday morning

Jesus Reyes

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – A 41-year-old man from Palmdale was arrested after allegedly stabbing a person early Tuesday morning in Palm Springs.

The incident was first reported just before 4 a.m. on the 600 block of S. Palm Canyon Drive.

According to the Palm Springs Police Department, the first responding officers found a man with a laceration to his head.

“The victim provided limited information, stating he had been attacked by an unknown male who fled northbound in a white pickup truck occupied by a male driver and a female passenger,” reads a PSPD news release.

Officers later found the suspect vehicle near N Indian Canyon Drive and W Tramview Road, according to jail records. Police determined that the driver had “injuries consistent with being involved in an altercation.”

The witness then assisted in identifying the driver as the suspect.

The suspect was booked at the John Benoit Detention Center in Indio. He faces an attempted homicide charge and a parole violation. Jail records show that he is scheduled to appear in court on Friday.

Anyone with information regarding this incident is encouraged to contact the Palm Springs Police Department’s Investigative Services Division at (760) 323-8121. Those wishing to remain anonymous may contact Crime Stoppers at (760) 341-STOP (7867).

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One dead, one injured in crash in Imperial Sand Dunes

Dillon Fuhrman

IMPERIAL COUNTY, Calif. (KYMA) – The California Highway Patrol (CHP) is investigating a crash which left one person dead and one person injured.

According to a press release, the crash happened at the Imperial Sand Dunes, south of Interstate 8 and south of Grays Well Road, before 11 a.m. Monday.

CHP says two men were riding a 2017 Polaris RZR Turbo Pro Star when the vehicle drove over a sand hill, the front of the vehicle crashed into the bottom of the bowl, causing it to overturn onto its roof.

While one of the men, a 49-year-old from Ephrata, Washington who was driving the vehicle, was able to exit the vehicle on his own, CHP says the other man, an 81-year-old from Casa Grande, Arizona who was the passenger, had to be removed from the vehicle.

While U.S. Border Patrol agents and the Imperial County Fire Department tried to save him, CHP says the passenger was pronounced dead at the scene.

CHP also says the driver suffered lacerations to the head, and says both men were wearing their seatbelts at the time of the crash.

The investigation is ongoing.

press releaseDownload

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