Idaho death row inmate Erick Hall dies of natural causes

Seth Ratliff

BOISE, Idaho (KIFI) — Erick Hall, the convicted murderer behind two of Idaho’s most notorious cold cases, will not face the state’s execution chamber. The Idaho Department of Correction announced Tuesday that Hall passed away from natural causes at a local hospital on Feb. 9, 2026, at 9:58 p.m.

At the time of his death, Hall was serving two death sentences for the first-degree murders of Lynn Henneman and Cheryl Ann Hanlon in Ada County.

The Crimes that Haunted Boise

In 2000, Hall raped and murdered flight attendant Lynn Henneman, originally from Bozeman, Montana. Adding to the tragedy, the murder took place less than a month after the young flight attendant had married Walter Us.

According to the Bozeman Daily Chronicle, Henneman was in Boise on a layover for United Airlines when she went missing for two weeks before her body was discovered in the river on Oct. 7, 2000.

It unfortunately took yet another tragedy to solve the case. In March 2003, a teenager found the body of Cheryl Ann Hanlon of Boise along a trail in the foothills. According to reports by the Spokesman Review, Hanlon had been raped and beaten so severely that she looked like the victim of a traffic accident.

The breakthrough came after a witness reported seeing Hanlon walking with a man in downtown Boise the night before her death. The resulting composite sketch led to Hall’s arrest. Once in custody, investigators used DNA evidence to definitively link the then-transient Hall to the 2000 murder of Henneman.

Hall spent decades fighting the sentences. In 2018, he appealed to the Idaho Supreme Court, claiming he had received an unfair trial. However, the justices upheld the death sentence in a majority ruling, stating Hall had been provided with adequate representation and a fair legal process.

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FBI releases images of possible Nancy Guthrie disappearance suspect

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The FBI released images from a doorbell camera on Tuesday that agents say show a person who was involved in Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance.

The black-and-white images show a person in a ski mask and gloves and wearing a backpack, tampering with the camera. The person appears to be armed.

The images show “an armed individual appearing to have tampered with the camera at Nancy Guthrie’s front door the morning of her disappearance,” according to a post on FBI Director Kash Patel’s X account.

“Over the last eight days, the FBI and Pima County Sheriff’s Department have been working closely with our private sector partners to continue to recover any images or video footage from Nancy Guthrie’s home that may have been lost, corrupted, or inaccessible due to a variety of factors – including the removal of recording devices. The video was recovered from residual data located in backend systems,” Patel wrote in the post.

Nancy Guthrie is the mother of Savannah Guthrie, a host of NBC’s “Today.” Tuesday marked the 10th day since her disappearance.

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Emergency service crews demonstrate CPR live for KRDO13 for Heart Health Month

Bradley Davis

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – Emergency service crews in Colorado Springs show KRDO13’s Bradley Davis how bystander CPR can save a life.

According to the American Heart Association, proper bystander CPR within two minutes of a cardiac episode increases the patient’s chance of survival by over 80%. It also increases the likelihood of the patient leaving without permanent brain damage by almost 100%.

A field supervisor with American Medical Response (AMR), the company Colorado Springs contracts with for the city’s ambulance service, said he’s seen bystander CPR save lives first-hand.

“When we show up, and it’s being done, it really helps our process and our work on scene to keep that blood flowing early, all that healthy, oxygenated blood in the patient, to keep their brain, their lungs, and their heart with good, clean blood,” field supervisor Caleb Hadfield said.

American Medical Response (AMR) staff recommends asking your school or employer if they partner with any CPR training classes. If not, the American Red Cross and the American Heart Association host online and in-person classes weekly, ranging from $35-$75.

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Suspect in El Centro found with gun and active warrant

Dillon Fuhrman

EL CENTRO, Calif. (KYMA) – The El Centro Police Department (ECPD) says a suspect is in custody after finding out there was an active warrant for the suspect’s arrest.

According to a post on Facebook, officers responded to the area of Adams Avenue and North Seventh Street, near Sidewinder Skatepark, Sunday for a welfare check on a suspicious person.

During the investigation, ECPD says officers found a .38 special revolver on the suspect, and later found that the suspect had an active warrant for their arrest.

ECPD says officers arrested and booked the suspect into the Imperial County Jail for the outstanding warrant and possession of a loaded firearm.

Courtesy: El Centro Police Department

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Victim dies in hit and run on E. County 18 1/2 Street

Dillon Fuhrman

YUMA COUNTY, Ariz. (KYMA) – The Yuma County Sheriff’s Office (YCSO) says one of the victims involved in a hit and run Monday has died.

It happened in the area of E. County 18 1/2 Street and S. Avenue 3E before 6:30 a.m., according to YCSO.

YCSO says two people were standing near their parked vehicles on the south side of E. County 18 1/2 Street when a red Mazda truck driving westbound on County 18 1/2 veered into the eastbound lanes and crashed into the parked vehicles.

As a result, YCSO says the victims were hit and suffered serious injuries, and the driver of the Mazda got out and ran away.

YCSO says the victims were flown to a Phoenix area hospital due to their injuries, but one of the victims, 31-year-old Jesus Velazquez of Yuma, died from his injuries.

Meanwhile, the other victim in the hit and run, a 28-year-old woman, is said to be in stable condition, YCSO says.

The investigation is still ongoing. If anyone has information regarding the case, call YCSO at (928) 783-4427, call 78-CRIME to remain anonymous, or visit YCSO’s website to submit an anonymous tip.

PR-2026-07-Serious-Injury-Collision-updateDownload

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Rural Deschutes County residents to get new curbside recycling service this summer

Campbell Porter

(Update: clarifying information, adding video, comments from residents)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Rural residents in Deschutes County will soon be able to roll their recycling carts to the curb for the first time.

After holding a public hearing earlier Wednesday, the Deschutes County Board of County Commissioners voted unanimously to approve a plan allowing Republic Services to provide commingled curbside recycling in distant rural areas that currently only have trash pickup. The new service will cover areas south of Sunriver and rural zones north and east of Bend, Redmond and Sisters. It does not cover urban areas like downtown Bend or Redmond.

Households in those areas now receive garbage collection from Wilderness Garbage and Recycling, Bend Garbage and Recycling and High Country Disposal*, but none of those companies offers curbside recycling in those specific zones. Under the approved proposal, all customers will see a $6 monthly increase on their trash bill, whether they choose to participate in curbside recycling or not.

For residents like Kim Lavelle, who lives in one of the affected rural areas, the change has been a long time coming.

“It’s really frustrating. We want to do what’s right. We just can’t. Our hands are tied,” she said, describing the difficulty of recycling without curbside service.

Another resident, Laura, said the extra effort required to haul recyclables to drop-off locations keeps many people from recycling at all.

“It’s definitely an effort. I think a lot of people in our community probably don’t recycle because of the effort. It does take a lot of extra trips and time management, as opposed to having something that you can just do right at your curbside,” Laura said.

With the commissioners’ vote, Republic Services will begin delivering recycling carts to eligible rural customers and is set to start commingled recycling collection after July 1, 2026.

The county says the new service is intended to make recycling more accessible and convenient for residents who have been asking for better options for years.

*Wilderness Garbage and Recycling, Bend Garbage and Recycling, and High Country Disposal are the current trash providers for those specific distant rural zones, even though Republic Services acquired High Country Disposal, Bend Garbage & Recycling, and Deschutes Recycling back in 2019 for urban service in Bend, Redmond, and Sisters.

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How school districts are protecting students after Riverside County confirms first measles case of 2026

Gavin Nguyen

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) – The county announced the first confirmed measles case of the year in western Riverside County Monday evening.

Health officials with Riverside University Health System Public Health said the case involved a child who was not vaccinated for measles and had no recent history of international or out-of-state travel.

It comes amid other reported cases in Southern California. According to the state’s Department of Public Health, nine cases of measles have been confirmed in recent weeks in California. Measles in Orange, Los Angeles, and San Bernardino counties are included in that tally.

Local school districts, like Palm Springs Unified, said they have very high vaccination rates and no current cases. We’re speaking with district leaders on what’s being done to protect students and what their recommendations are to prevent potential spread in the valley’s youth.

Stay with us for the latest.

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Teen pleads guilty to murder of Blackfoot woman

Curtis Jackson

BLACKFOOT, Idaho (KIFI)—A teen who was charged in the killing of a woman last fall in Blackfoot has entered a guilty plea in court.

Bobby Grant Jackson pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for the death of Rebecca Rivera. The plea was submitted on January 29, 2026, as part of a binding agreement with prosecutors. If the judge accepts the deal, Jackson will serve at least 20 years in prison.  

Rivera’s body was found dead on October 23, 2025, at a trailer park at 1159 Broadway in Blackfoot. According to investigators, preliminary findings indicated that before the shooting, Jackson had stolen a firearm and had been reported as a teen runaway.

Police say Jackson arrived at Rivera’s home sometime after 12:40 PM on October 23, where he allegedly shot her in the head before leaving the home.

Following the shooting, investigators say Jackson traveled to Chubbuck and eventually to Pocatello, where he was located at a home and taken into custody without incident that night.

Because Jackson was a minor at the time of the crime, he is not eligible for the death penalty. Sentencing is scheduled for March 4 at 9 a.m.

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Missouri public education advocates rally for funding at Capitol

Haley Swaino

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

More than 100 parents, teachers and students from across Missouri gathered at the state Capitol on Tuesday afternoon for Public Education Lobby Day, urging lawmakers to prioritize funding for public schools.

Advocates came together in the Capitol Rotunda after having more than 100 different meetings with legislators regarding public education funding.

“I feel pretty positive leaving today,” Sara Dillard of Francis Howell Forward, a non-partisan, grassroots organization formed by parents, said. “I know that we’ve had some good conversations and that we have some legislators in our corner. So I think that we’ve got a good fight ahead of us.”

Rally attendees spanned from Kansas City Public Schools to St. Charles, Mid-Missouri and more.

Their message centers on the need to fully fund Missouri’s public schools and protect them from what organizers describe as growing financial threats at both the state and federal levels.

“Whether it is through eliminating income tax, which will deplete the budget for any kind of public services in the state of Missouri and will absolutely be getting rid of schools. Or it is expanding voucher programs that allow people who already pay for private schools and who can already afford private schools to write off some of it. Or through charter school expansion, which is literally just letting private businesses have a stake in your child’s education. It’s putting a price tag on kids,” legislative chair of American Federation of Teachers Local 691 Carter Taylor said.

Students are also joining in the fight.

“It’s unfair that we are fighting for basic rights and like basic necessities that we need in the classroom,“ Lincoln College Preparatory Academy High School student Cairos Im said.

She took the day off school to come lobby at the Capitol alongside many others from her community.

“I think that the number here today and the work that we’ve done shows the strength of public schools and the community and how powerful we can be,” Im said.

Public elementary and secondary education accounts for more than a fifth of all Missouri’s state expenditures, according to research.

The Kehoe administration is also rewriting the state’s 20-year-old K-12 foundation formula, which has drawn criticism from lawmakers, educators and charter advocates alike for being outdated and inequitable.

The current formula is designed to reflect what is considered necessary or adequate to provide a quality education. The goal is to move from a system based on tax rates to a performance-based model that addresses student needs. 

“On every level, education is under attack in terms of their funding,” Taylor said. “It’s much easier to simply put bills in hidden language and make it harder for people to understand what it’s doing than it is to actually come out into the light and tell people directly, ‘Hey, we are trying to get rid of public education.’ Because that’s what’s at stake right now.”

A 16-member Missouri School Funding Modernization Task Force was appointed by Kehoe to establish and submit formula recommendations by Dec. 1, 2026.

The message to lawmakers at the rally was clear: keep students’ needs at the forefront as they consider tax and spending proposals in the current legislative session.

“Don’t deprioritize public education funding,” Taylor said. “They can say whatever they want about having to balance a budget and they can try to hide behind other intentions. But the truth is, we are 49th out of 50 for spending per student. We are 50 out of 50 for a starting teacher’s salary.”

Taylor said Missouri is losing educators because of the state’s lack of support.

“If we do not support educators, they can’t support students,” Taylor said. “Take care of the teachers in the school building. Take care of the support staff in the school building. And make sure that everyone has the chance to come to work to be able to teach without having to worry about whether or not there will be snacks for their students or books for the kids to read.”

The event was held at 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Capitol Rotunda in Jefferson City.

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Bannock County announces property tax relief Open Houses for eligible residents

Maile Sipraseuth

BANNOCK COUNTY, Idaho (KIFI) — Eligible Bannock County residents can save up to $1,500 on their property taxes, and the Bannock County Assessor’s Office is encouraging those who may qualify to apply for the 2026 Property Tax Reduction program.

The Property Tax Reduction (PTR) program, formerly the “circuit breaker,” helps lower property taxes for qualifying Idahoans, including seniors, widows and widowers, recognized disabled individuals, disabled veterans, former prisoners of war, and the visually impaired. To qualify, applicants must have an annual income of $39,130 or less.

For more information about applying, the Bannock County Assessor’s Office will host multiple open houses throughout the community, where staff will be available to answer questions and help with applications.

Residents who think they may qualify are also welcome to call the Assessor’s Office for help at 208-236-7260 or visit bannockcounty.gov/assessor.

Upcoming PTR Open House Schedule:

Feb. 24, 9-10 a.m. – Arimo City Hall – 115 Henderson Rd. 

Feb. 26, 9-10 a.m. – Downey Community Center – 15 S Main St. 

March 3, 9-10 a.m. – Lava Hot Springs Senior Center — 150 N Center St. 

March 5, 9-10 a.m. – McCammon City Office – 100 Center St. 

March 10, 9-10 a.m. – Inkom City Hall — 365 N Rapid Creek Rd. 

March 12, 9-10 a.m. – Chubbuck City Hall — 290 E Linden Ave. 

March 19, 9-10 a.m. – Pocatello Senior Activity Center — 427 N 6th Ave

The application deadline for 2026 is Wednesday, April 15.

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