Victor plans to move forward on building its own wastewater treatment facility

Curtis Jackson

VICTOR, Idaho (KIFI)— The City of Victor announced Tuesday they will move forward in constructing its own wastewater treatment facility.

In a news release sent by the City Clerk, Michelle Smith, on Tuesday, it said the decision came after mediation with the City of Driggs on a shared wastewater system “did not produce a viable path forward.”

The Victor City Council decided to separate from the Driggs treatment facility back in March 2025. Following comments and outcry from city residents about the treatment plant’s cost and location, City leaders said they would seek to negotiate with Driggs on a regional solution. But after several meeting, city leaders decided to move forward with its original plan.

“Council remains committed to transparency, environmental stewardship, and constructive engagement with our residents and neighbors,” the news release said. “To that end, the City has engaged an engineering firm with the stated intent of building a Class A facility, ensuring treated water will meet or exceed the highest standards.”

You can read the full news release here.

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Local students through Yuma County protest ICE and Trump Administration

Eduardo Morales

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – Hundreds of students from Gila Ridge, Yuma High, Kofa, Somerton and Cibola High School all marched out of class in protest of ICE and the Trump Administration.

Jenny Nieves, a local parent watching over the protest, explains why she supports her child’s decision to participate.

“No matter what your beliefs are, everybody has a right to speak up on them, and it’s amazing to see high schoolers, kids at such a young age, getting involved and being active and fighting for what they believe in in a peaceful way,” Nieves explains.

Meanwhile across town, Aracelli Aquino, a local adult in attendance, wanted to ensure the kids safety.

“We want to make sure that they’re following the laws, and making sure that they’re on the sidewalk, and just not disrupting any traffic going on. We want to make sure that they stay safe and nothing happens to them,” Aquino says.

However, she does support the students using their freedom of speech.

“These kids…it’s important what they’re doing they do have a voice, and they are using their voice today, and I am so proud of them,” Aquino said.

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Man convicted of killing wife, another man at Palm Desert hotel

Jesus Reyes

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – A man was convicted of killing his wife and another man during a domestic violence dispute outside a Palm Desert hotel in 2022.

A jury found Kenny Wu, 37, guilty of two counts of first-degree murder, the Riverside County District Attorney’s Office announced on Tuesday. He is scheduled to be sentenced on April 17, court records show.

Deputies from the sheriff’s Palm Desert station responded to a report of an assault with a deadly weapon in the parking lot of the SpringHill Suites hotel in the 72300 block of Highway 111 on the morning of July 15, Riverside County Sheriff’s Department Sgt. Ben Ramirez said.

In the parking lot, deputies found a man and a woman, who were pronounced dead at the scene within minutes of the deputies’ arrival, Ramirez said. Wu was found alive with blunt force trauma to his body and taken to a hospital.  

The dead woman was identified as Yaying Wu, 31, also of Palm Desert, the suspect’s wife. Police said the male victim was Jesus Sanchez, 30, of Cathedral City.

“Evidence presented at trial showed that Wu committed the killings after his wife firmly declared she wanted a divorce. The prosecution detailed evidence of stalking, domestic violence, infidelity, and ongoing marital issues leading up to the fatal confrontation,” reads a social media post by the DA’s office. 

Defense attorney John Dolan described his client as mentally overwrought by his spouse’s rejection of him.   

“This case is about Kenny’s state of mind,” Dolan told jurors at the outset of the trial. “It’s an awful and ugly situation.”  

He recounted how his client had been distressed to the point of a psychological collapse over YaYa’s ongoing relationship with Sanchez in 2022.   

The affair was uncovered in the winter of that year, and Wu initially tried to forgive his spouse’s behavior but it left him scarred and emotionally damaged, in need of professional help, Dolan said.

The defendant futilely hoped that his wife would abandon her connection to Sanchez and remain in the defendant’s life. Wu had long conversations with relatives, seeking to resolve the conflict. Dolan said YaYa’s own father tried to help, speaking with the defendant for more than two hours via telephone, listening to him plead for her fidelity.   

Testimony from Wu’s preliminary hearing in October 2022 indicated that he had physically assaulted the woman on more than one occasion, stemming from her communications with Sanchez.  

YaYa’s mother, Xue Jia, believed her daughter was in danger, having heard Wu express a desire “to kill them,” a sheriff’s deputy testified.

When Wu discovered the victim intended to meet Sanchez at the Spring Hill Suites on Highway 111 in Palm Desert on the morning of July 15, 2022, he went there, waiting for the victims and then confronting them in the parking lot, according to investigators.

“The rage just exploded,” Dolan said.  

Prosecutors said Wu pulled a knife and stabbed his wife and Sanchez multiple times, killing them. The defendant did not attempt to flee afterward, instead inflicting superficial wounds to himself, apparently to make it appear there had been a struggle. He was arrested without incident.

“We are here for his choices, his decisions,” Deputy District Attorney Samantha Paixao told the jury.  

Wu had no documented prior felony convictions.

Stay with News Channel 3 for continuing coverage.

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Palm Desert church hold candlelight vigil in response to ICE shootings in Minnesota

Gavin Nguyen

PALM DESERT, Calif. (KESQ) – A candlelight vigil was held Tuesday evening at St. Margaret’s Episcopal Church in Palm Desert.

Attendees gathered in the front steps of St. Margaret’s in “remembrance of those recently killed by ICE in Minnesota and in solidarity with immigrants, refugees, and all who live in fear. We gather to pray for the dead, comfort the grieving, and stand for justice, dignity, and compassion.”

Father Andrew Butler, the rector at St. Margaret’s, said this isn’t a political issue but a moral one, and he says a key point in his faith is to respect the dignity of all human beings and said he felt a need to provide this space for people to pray. 

“There are protests going on all over the country and I felt like if some people protest, some people pray, so you can do both, but I felt like there was a need for the community to come together to pray for what’s happening, just the violence, the rampant violence,” Butler said.

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Felon admits trying to rape woman at Whitewater dog training facility

Jesus Reyes

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – A convicted felon accused of trying to sexually assault a woman at a Whitewater canine training facility pleaded guilty today to attempted rape.

Bryan Vines Burge, 55, admitted the felony count Tuesday under a pretrial agreement with the Riverside County District Attorney’s Office. In exchange for his admission, prosecutors agreed to drop two related charges and a sentence-enhancing allegation of using a deadly weapon during a sexual offense.

The crime happened on Aug. 16, 2025. According to sheriff’s investigators, shortly before 7 a.m., the defendant forcibly entered the Guide Dogs of the Desert compound at 60735 Dillon Road, where canines are specially trained to serve as companion and guardian pets for the blind.

Superior Court Judge Elizabeth Tucker scheduled a sentencing hearing for March 19 at the Larson Justice Center in Indio. A potential sentence was not published.

Burge remains held without bail at the nearby Benoit Detention Center.

According to investigators with the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office, shortly before 7 a.m. last Aug. 16, the defendant forcibly entered the Guide Dogs of the Desert compound at 60735 Dillon Road, where canines are specially trained to serve as companion and guardian pets for the blind.

Sheriff’s officials said Burge encountered a woman and pulled a knife on her, proceeding with an attempted sexual assault.

The victim struggled and suffered unspecified injuries during the attack but was able to break free of the defendant’s grasp and flee to call for help, according to investigators.   

Patrol deputies converged on the location a short time later and initiated a search based on the woman’s statements. They located and arrested Burge without incident on Dillon Road three hours later.

The victim did not require hospitalization. It was unclear whether the defendant specifically burglarized the training facility to target the woman.   

Court documents indicated he had prior convictions out of Orange County for burglary and lewd acts on a minor.

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Police chase ends with 2 people arrested in Idaho Falls

Curtis Jackson

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) – A high-speed chase on I-15 ended at the Broadway off-ramp in Idaho Falls near the former Shari’s Restaurant on Tuesday afternoon.

Idaho Falls Police spokeswoman Jessica Clements said around 2 p.m., Idaho State Police stopped a white SUV was stopped on I-15 between the Hells-Half Acre Rest Area and Shelley exit. Suddenly, the vehicle sped away north on the Interstate. The trooper then chased after them, requesting help from Idaho Falls Police.

Clements said the vehicle took the Broadway exit and crossed the intersection, running through a fence near the Idaho Falls welcome sign and came to rest on the sidewalk just outside the Shari’s building.

Clements said police quickly arrested the driver and a passenger. They are calling it a drug investigation even though they haven’t said if any illegal drugs have been located.

An SUV is searched after a high speed with Idaho State Police on Feb. 3.

This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.

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Former jailer convicted of manslaughter in Cooper County Jail death

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A former corrections officer was convicted Tuesday of manslaughter in the 2023 death of a woman being held in the Cooper County Jail.

Robyn Pfeiffer was convicted Tuesday by a Callaway County jury of second-degree involuntary manslaughter, said Jackson County prosecutor’s office spokesperson Jazzlyn Johnson. A special prosecutor was brought in from Jackson County, Missouri, to work on the case.

Sentencing will be in April.

The trial began last week. Pfieffer was charged with manslaughter for the death of Brooke Bailey. Bailey died from untreated diabetes in her cell at the Cooper County Jail. Court documents say several jail workers told investigators with the Pettis County Sheriff’s Office that Pfeiffer brushed off Bailey’s complaints of feeling ill, saying the inmate was “playing games.”

Bailey was found dead in her cell with blood and vomit on the floor and on her clothing. Bailey was being held for a commitment to the Department of Mental Health.

A medical examiner found Bailey died from diabetic ketoacidosis and low sodium levels.

Another jailer charged in the case, Rachel Atherton, is scheduled to go to trial in April.

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Billboards promoting ‘safe online exchanges’ seen around Missouri after Columbia man’s shooting death

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Several billboards in Mid-Missouri are promoting safer online exchanges.

Viewers may see those billboards from the group “Justice For Joshua Grey” across the area. Grey died in a 2018 Virginia shooting after setting up the sale of a cellphone on the internet.

The new billboards in Missouri come after Michael Ryan Burke was shot to death on Jan. 18 in the 1400 block of Ridgemont Court. Court documents allege Burke had used Facebook Marketplace to arrange to arrange a cellphone sale.

Tim Ketchum, of Lamar Advertising, says people need to think about safe places to set up online exchanges.

“It’s something that our community and all of us need to be aware of, because none of us are really absent of this happening in our life because it’s so prevalent that these platforms are used,” he said.

There will be nine electronic billboards around Columbia: One in Ashland, one near Jefferson City, one near Boonville and six around the Lake of the Ozarks. Since Columbia doesn’t allow electronic billboards, they are having static ads printed and placed in the city soon. Another seven will appear in Kansas City and Springfield, each, Ketchum said.

Three adults and a juvenile were charged in Burke’s shooting death.

Alexis Baumann, 18, of Hallsville; and Kobe Aust and Joseph Crane, both 18, of Columbia; were all charged with first-degree robbery, armed criminal action, felony murder and armed criminal action. All three people are being held at the Boone County Jail without bond.

The juvenile has not been named, but is the person described as the shooter in court documents.

A confined docket hearing for Aust was scheduled for Tuesday at the Boone County Courthouse and he was denied bond. A bond review is scheduled again for Feb. 10.

Hearings were held last week for Baumann and Crane, and they were denied bond. Crane and Aust have a preliminary hearing scheduled for 9 a.m. Thursday, March 5. Baumann has a preliminary hearing scheduled for 9 a.m. Tuesday, March 10.

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Boys & Girls Clubs of Bend launching its first Saturday child care to better support local families

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — The Boys & Girls Clubs of Bend is launching its first Saturday programming beginning this week to provide additional child-care support for local families.

The organization says it will offer services for youth ages 5-18 between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.

The expansion marks the first time the organization will offer weekend services during the school year. The initiative is intended to fill child care gaps for Central Oregon parents who work on Saturdays and to increase the overall community impact of the club’s programs.

The club will provide services for youth ages 5-18 Monday through Saturday. While the organization traditionally operated only on weekdays, the new Saturday hours will run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. during the school year.

Boys & Girls Clubs CEO Michael Baker said in a news release that the decision to expand was based on the specific needs of local working parents.

“We are so excited to offer this additional day of service each week during the school year,” Baker said. “For many of our families, Saturday is just another day when they have to work in order to make ends meet. Opening on Saturdays falls in line with our goal to serve more members, more often with deeper impact.”

Current club members can register for the weekend sessions through the My Club Hub portal. The organization noted that a child does not need to be a current after-school member to participate, as options for Saturday-only registration are available for interested families.

The programs offered by the organization are designed to promote academic success, healthy lifestyles and good character. Families who wish to become members or learn more about the enrollment process can call the club at 541-617-2877 or visit the club’s website..

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Man absolved of wrongdoing in La Quinta party shooting death

City News Service

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – A man was cleared of all charges in the 2019 shooting death of a Halloween partygoer in La Quinta after an Indio jury acquitted him, court records confirmed today.  

After deliberating less than five hours Monday, jurors weighing the fate of Jorge Andres Huerta Arias, 24, of Whitewater returned with not guilty verdicts on murder and the lesser and included offense of voluntary manslaughter in the death of 19-year-old Anthony Carrillo of La Quinta.

The trial concluded Monday after roughly two weeks of testimony at the Larson Justice Center. Riverside County Superior Court Judge Otis Sterling closed the case following jurors’ verdicts. However, Arias was not immediately released from the Benoit Detention Center, where he remained held without bail Tuesday pending resolution of an unrelated felony case, for which a hearing is scheduled Feb. 13.  

Carrillo was fatally shot on Oct. 26, 2019.   

At the outset of the trial, defense attorney Shaun Sullivan contended the “case is about survival,” not murder.   

Sullivan told jurors Arias went to the party with his cousin and her boyfriend to have a good time — not to promote his “clique,” as the prosecution argued.

The attorney said Carrillo was a member of his own clique and he and Arias had been at odds previously. Sullivan described Carrillo as a bully, who joined his associates in trying to intimidate the defendant while they attended high school together.   

According to the defense, during the Halloween party, his client clearly heard someone shouting, “Smoke this fool; get the gun!” and Arias was instantly in fear of his life.   

“He fires back out of survival, out of fear,” Sullivan told the jury.   

He acknowledged Arias fled the scene, but said it was for self preservation, which he also said explained the young man’s choice of hospitals. He said Arias worried that if he tried to go to a medical facility in the Coachella Valley, Carrillo’s associates might seek him out to finish what they started at the party.  

Deputy District Attorney Steve Sorensen told jurors that Arias went to the house party at 53965 Avenida Madero armed with a handgun and intent on causing trouble.

Sorensen outlined how the defendant was active in his gang and wore a black hat with the brand clearly visible to reinforce his standing as a member. While others were dancing to loud music shortly after midnight, Arias turned confrontational, focusing his attention on individuals he perceived as adversaries, the prosecutor alleged.

“Instead of using his hands, the defendant pulls out a gun,” Sorenson said, adding that Arias unleashed a “volume of shots” that caused people to dive for cover or run.

Carrillo was in the line of fire and mortally wounded. Someone — it was unclear who — returned fire and shot Arias in the buttocks, possibly as he fled from the property, according to the prosecution.

Sheriff’s deputies converged on the residence minutes later and discovered the victim in critical condition. He was taken to a Coachella Valley hospital, where he died that morning.

The defendant went to a friend’s residence in Cathedral City, where he elicited help. He was taken to San Gorgonio Memorial Hospital in Banning for treatment of his non-life-threatening posterior wound.

Hospital staff notified law enforcement of the patient’s arrival, and Cathedral City police officers went to question him because he claimed to have been the victim of a drive-by attack in that city.

Sorensen said a search of the area where the supposed drive-by occurred turned up no evidence to support the claim.   

Though he was ultimately connected with the shooting at the La Quinta property, Arias was not immediately arrested. Sheriff’s detectives spent the ensuing years tying together loose ends and gathering sufficient evidence to finally seek felony charges against him in 2025, culminating in his arrest last June.

Arias has no documented prior felony convictions in county adult court.

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