Man taken into custody after hiding under a bridge near Yuma Main Canal

Madeline Murray

WINTERHAVEN, Calif. (KYMA) – The Arizona State Gang Police Task Force responded to a call involving a man hiding under a bridge near the Yuma Main Canal Tuesday evening.

Officers made several attempts to get the man to come out from under the bridge.

After safely removing him from the area, he was taken into custody, with officials on scene saying the situation stemmed from an issue out of Phoenix.

We’ve reached out to the Arizona Department of Public Safely for more information, and will bring you updates as they become available.

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EPWater, TecH2O Learning Center host Landscape Expo

Nichole Gomez

El Paso, TX (KVIA-TV) – El Paso Water and the TecH2O Learning Center can help you design your next water-smart landscape at the second annual Landscape Expo.

Schedule of events:• 10 a.m. – Design Your Yard• 10:45 a.m. – Plants that Survive• 11:30 a.m. – DIY Water Harvesting and Landscapes• 12:15 p.m. – Maintaining your Landscape• 1 p.m. – Smart Irrigation

Learn how to design a beautiful, water-smart landscape for your home from landscape experts whowill share tips on irrigation, plant selection, and sustainable garden design. Enjoy interactive gardenactivities for kids, ask the experts, and explore resources to help you create an attractive yard thatconserves water. Soil testing information will also be available.

The free, family-friendly event will take place Saturday, March 21, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

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82 Idaho students named U.S. Presidential Scholars candidates

Kaeden Lincoln

Originally posted on IdahoEdNews.org on March 17, 2026

By Kaeden Lincoln, IdahoEdNews

BOISE, Idaho — Eighty-two Idaho students are candidates for the U.S. Department of Education’s Presidential Scholars Program.

Nationwide, up to 161 students will be selected as Presidential Scholars. The U.S. Department of Education will release its list of winners — usually one male and one female student per state — in the summer.

The state superintendent chooses candidates who have demonstrated excellence in academics, arts or career-technical education.

Here is the list of this year’s candidates from Idaho, organized by school:

Ambrose School

Eli R. Link

Bishop Kelly High School

Paige D. Bach

Carson Konop

Mullai G. Subramaniyan

Boise High School

Thorstein E. Black

Thoren Honcik

Olivia Judah

Reese Kindig

Sean Norton

Emerson Shirey

Stella R. Thornfeldt

Centennial High School

Lawson Rocke

COMPASS Public Charter School

Zechariah David

Coeur d’Alene Senior High School

Ava J. Gabbert

Brady Gatten

Caldwell Senior High School

Isaac Archuleta

Eagle High School

Carmen M. Dudley

Jonathan Y. Zhang

Grace High School

Kallie G. Stoddard

Grace Lutheran School

Cristiano Manes

Gonzaga Preparatory School

Lawrence L. Jackson

Highland High School

Jack Larsen

Mason N. Pierson

Idaho Falls High School

Scott B. Thomas

Jonas C. Webb

Idaho Home School

Caleb K. Pon

Idaho Technical Career Academy

Corin Stanaway

Inspire Connections Academy

Dainan Aldridge

Kellogg High School

Abdulaziz Musaev

Parker A. Heyden

Kimberly High School

Katelyn Layne

Madison Senior High School

Ryan K. Hymas

Mackay High School

Damien Willman

Meridian Charter High School

Gideon Richmond

North Idaho STEM Charter Academy

Konner Knoll

Owyhee High School

James Campbell

Brayden Harper

Pullman High School

Marigold L. Flagg

Preston High School

Helaman R. Steele

Renaissance High School

Kavya Bansal

Alizandria Bradley

Steven Ha

Charles Hansen

Magdalena Stay

Ridgevue High School

Thomas Amberg

Riverstone International School

Khanh Truong

Rigby High School

Adelyn Anderson

Rocky Mountain High School

Brian Holmes

Seth M. Nelson

Sandpoint High School

Evan R. Brubaker

Conner Kluender

Skyline High School

Gavin Pentz

Timberline High School

Alex C. Atalla

Miles I. Chavarria

Andrew Coon

Jeemin J. Kim

Kayla Lee

Isaac A. Levesque

Bryan B. Li

Randy F. Li

Audrey T. Liu

Jiexi Mei

Evelyn Myers

Jiwon Park

Atharva Tripathi

Joshua Wilson

Jacob Leckie

Thunder Ridge High School

Amalia Spencer

Twin Falls High School

Tyson A. Cory

Darren Yee Su

Wood River High School

Hank Huntsman

Cyrus Pott

Oscar H. Mullen

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Old Highway 91 in Inkom to close March 19 for I-15 bridge replacement

News Release

The following is a news release from the Idaho Transportation Department:

INKOM, Idaho — Old Highway 91 under the Interstate 15 bridges in Inkom will close from March 19 through July 24 to allow crews to continue replacing the bridges in town. During the closure, traffic will be detoured along North Rapid Creek Road and North Inkom Road. 

Last year, the three southbound bridges were replaced. This year, crews are focusing on the northbound bridges, with all work planned to be completed in late October. Freeway traffic has been shifted to the southbound lanes and is reduced to one lane in each direction.

Motorists should watch for crews, use caution, and drive safely through the work zone.

To learn more about the project or sign up for construction updates, visit itd.idaho.gov/project/inkom-corridor/. Motorists can also check 511.idaho.gov for current conditions and closures.

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Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints opens Sunday School Presidencies to women

News Team

SALT LAKE, Utah (KIFI) — In a landmark policy shift, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has opened Sunday School presidency roles to women. The change, effective immediately, marks the first time in the faith’s history that women will be eligible to lead the program at the local level.

The First Presidency, the highest governing body of the church, announced the change on March 18, 2026, in a letter to Church leaders worldwide.

“This important change gives bishoprics additional options as they prayerfully consider who should lead the effort of teaching and learning in their wards,” said Sunday School General President Paul V. Johnson. “At the time of our call as Sunday School leaders in 2024, the First Presidency gave us a charge—as they have done with previous presidencies—to improve teaching and learning in the Church. There are many capable women and men who can help strengthen gospel instruction and foster spiritual growth.”

Under the updated policy, a Bishop may now choose to call either a man or a woman to serve as the Ward Sunday School President. If a woman is called as president, her counselors and secretary must also be female members of the ward. If a man is called the president, his counselors and secretary must be men.

The announcement carries particular weight in Idaho, home to nearly 400,000 members of the faith. Latter-day Saints account for approximately 25% of Idaho’s population, meaning this administrative change will be felt in almost every community across the state.

Local church members in Idaho Falls shared mixed but thoughtful reactions to the change. Judy Polatis grew up in the church and called the news “a little not normal” when she first heard it.

“I’m kind of old school,” she adds. “We have modern revelation, which helps. The church is always changing, progressing. Change is going to happen and we all just need to love and get used to it.”

Others expressed support for the expanded opportunity. “It is nice to see that women are now in that position” says Kate French, another member from Idaho Falls.

“I think the spirit guides both men and women.”

Traditionally, the faith allowed women to serve as teachers in the Sunday School Program, but leadership roles were previously reserved for men. This news marks a major change in the church’s Sunday school policy.

For more information, click HERE.

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FIRE ALERT: Debris burning in La Pine closed as a result of the Riverview Fire

Gregory Deffenbaugh

UPDATE: As a result of the Riverview fire which burnt 12 acres, the La Pine Rural Fire District has decided to close debris burning. The fire district also cited ‘unseasonably warm’ weather as a factor in the increased wildfire risk.

UPDATE: Fire crews contained a 12-acre wildfire in La Pine on Tuesday afternoon after the blaze threatened hundreds of homes and jumped the Little Deschutes River.

The Riverview Fire was first reported at 2:15 p.m., and its spread was mostly halted by 5 p.m.

Approximately 362 structures were threatened by the fire, which prompted local evacuations.

About 40 firefighters from seven different agencies responded to the scene to protect property and establish containment lines.

The fire crossed the Little Deschutes River and moved toward the east. While rivers and waterways often act as natural barriers against wildfires, the flames moved across the water and into the surrounding bitterbrush.

Before the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office issued evacuation orders, some residents used garden hoses to wet down the hillsides and vegetation near their homes. The sheriff began evacuations once the fire reached the edge of the river.

The Riverview Fire occurred amid regional concerns regarding a lack of significant snowfall. A small snowpack this winter has led to fears that the area will experience larger fires during the upcoming season.

Most of the personnel were released from the scene by 6 p.m.

Crews will monitor the burn area through the late hours of Tuesday night and into Wednesday morning. Personnel will continue to patrol the perimeter to ensure no new spots ignite.

UPDATE: Watch Duty: All evacuation orders throughout the area have been lifted.

UPDATE: According to the La Pine Rural Fire District, the riverview fire is now in mop-up. 232 structures were at level 1 evacuation orders and 131 were in level 3 evacuations. The cause is still under investigation. An estimated 40-50 firefighters from 10 agencies responded along with law enforcement and emergency management.

UPDATE: Watch Duty: The Temporary Evacuation Point has been changed from the La Pine Senior Activity Center to La Pine High School. Residents who have evacuated their homes and need a temporary place to stay are encouraged to visit La Pine High School at 51633 Coach Road.

Fire behavior has moderated on the Riverview Fire near La Pine, and the fire’s spread has slowed. There is a large number of resources on the scene. The Level 3 and Level 1 Evacuation Orders will remain in place until the winds die down and concerns about further spread of the fire subside.

Per the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office Oregon Facebook page.

UPDATE: Watch Duty: The fire has now been estimated at 20 acres, per the National Interagency Fire Center. Continue following this web article for the very latest information.

The La Pine Activity Center has been established as a temporary evacuation point for people needing to evacuate. It’s located at 16450 Victory Way in La Pine.

A Level 3 (GO NOW) Evacuation notice has been issued for Timber Lane Loop, Riverview Drive, Bridge Drive, and homes along the Little Deschutes River. This area is located north of Burgess Road and west of Huntington Road, east of Forest Road, and south of Elk Court and Deer Run Lane.A Level 1 (Be Ready) Evacuation notice has been issued for the neighborhood north of Burgess, east of Huntington Road, and west of Hwy 97. This includes Cagle Road, Railroad Street, Skidgel Road, Antler Lane, Doe Lane, Pine Drive, Pine Place, Ash Drive, Oak Drive, Elm Drive, Santa Barbara Drive, and Murray Drive.

UPDATE: Watch Duty: The La Pine Activity Center has been established as a temporary evacuation point for people needing to evacuate. It’s located at 16450 Victory Way in La Pine. Per Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office on Facebook.

UPDATE: Watch Duty: A Level 3 Go Now Evacuation Notice has been issued for Timber Lane Loop, Riverview Dr, Bridge Dr, homes along the Little Deschutes River. The area is depicted above, per Deschutes Alerts via Everbridge. See an interactive version of this evacuation map at this link.

LA PINE, Ore. (KTVZ) — The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office has issued a Level 3 evacuation alert due to a grass fire burning north of downtown La Pine.

The fire is approximately 10-15 acres, per radio traffic, per Watch Duty.

Watch Duty: A Level 1 Be Ready evacuation notice has been issued for the neighborhood North of Burgess, East of Huntington Rd and West of Hwy 97, per Deschutes Alerts via Everbridge.

A Level 3 Go Now Evacuation Notice has been issued for Timber Lane Loop and the area depicted above, per Deschutes Alerts via Everbridge. See an interactive version of this evacuation map at this link.

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Camden County prosecutor alleges misconduct, including false evidence, by sheriff’s deputies; sheriff defends his office and its work

Olivia Hayes

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

An extensive backlog, a lack of support and concerning behavior by personnel from the sheriff’s office were just some of the accusations laid out by the Camden County prosecutor to commissioners at their meeting Tuesday.

Prosecutor Richelle Grosvenor spoke at the end of the Camden County Commission meeting.

“When we showed up in January of ’23, one of the worst examples was that there was still somebody in custody from 2019, but charges that were pending,” Grosvenor said.

Grosvenor explained that there had not been a lead prosecutor in the county who had completed their term in office in nearly a decade when she took over.

“I was advised when I won the election that with the backlog and the particular set of circumstances that I was coming into, to expect six years,” Grosvenor said.

In February 2023, Grosvenor told Camden County commissioners that she received a call from a defense attorney about a video that showed what she described as “alarming behavior” by a Camden County deputy. She then detailed more troubling pieces to the puzzle that her office started to notice.

“We were noticing that sometimes the probable cause statements did not match the evidence that we were receiving,” Grosvenor said. “As time went on, we started getting calls from victims who were angry at us, claiming that we weren’t doing our job. We wanted to know their names, we looked in the file, we didn’t even have anything.”

Camden County Sheriff Chris Edgar called Grosvenor’s public statements “completely inappropriate” in a statement to ABC 17 News.

Grosvenor said her office was told by some victims that the Camden County Sheriff’s Office was claiming the prosecutor’s office wasn’t doing anything, but she said the sheriff’s office was not providing the necessary referrals.

Edgar said cases being dropped or not pursued are at the prosecutor’s discretion. He said his office has been contacted by unhappy victims and their families as well.

“What she chooses to do with those cases is her decision,” Edgar wrote. “I would encourage the families of crime victims who have made their disappointment known to me and my staff after their cases were dropped by the prosecutor to not be shy about sharing that information.”

Grosvenor then directly named Detective Cody McGuire, an Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force investigator with the sheriff’s office.

“Kid cases, death cases, property crimes, cases that obviously really matter to Camden County,” Grosvenor said. “If we’re not getting what we need from the sheriff’s office and this particular individual, then we have to figure out how to move forward.”

Grosvenor described instances of lost or mismanaged evidence in cases handled by McGuire. The prosecutor said her office has stopped filing charges referred by McGuire due to his believed misconduct.

“When those things are coming to light, and I’m realizing I could have potential credibility issues with a witness,” Grosvenor said.

Edgar referred to one specific case that he believed many of Grosvenor’s issues centered around. He said the mishandling of evidence she mentioned is in regard to a cell phone seized after he said detectives had already made their case.

“The case my office submitted had nothing to do with the evidence she has questions about,” Edgar wrote. “The evidence could have easily been suppressed at her or the defense’s request and the case still would have been solid.”

She said the falling out point happened recently when Grosvenor claimed McGuire created evidence that did not exist in a case, and he later recanted.

Grosvenor said that a meeting between McGuire and her office was set up, that he allegedly recorded without her knowledge. In a phone call Wednesday with an ABC 17 News reporter, Grosvenor further clarified that the meeting was for her to have the chance to speak with McGuire about how his alleged misconduct could make him an unreliable witness in court.

“If he had understood a basic criminal procedure, he would have understood that he is a witness in the case and he’s making a recorded statement,” Grosvenor said. “He never told me he was recording.”

Edgar disagreed with Grosvenor’s determination of McGuire or any of his employees being “unreliable witnesses”

“Her description of any of them being unreliable witnesses on the stand is her opinion that I believe may be based on the agency disagreeing with her dismissal of the previously described case concerning the cellphone,” Edgar said.

She claimed it also happened again, days later, to one of her office employees.

“It wasn’t until days later in the sheriff’s office, when they were making another recording of my employees secretly, that the question was asked are you recording?” Grosvenor said. “There was an honest answer, yes.”

Grosvenor said McGuire then admitted to her assistant prosecutor that he had recorded his conversation with Grosvenor in her office days before.

“Can you even imagine being a kid victim and finding out that a detective recorded a conversation with a prosecutor, including trial strategy and how to move forward, that now has to go to the defense attorney,” Grosvenor said.

She went on to tell the commissioner that the situation hasn’t just risked her office’s credibility and ability to properly prosecute cases, it’s also strained the trust between the two departments.

“It’s a sheriff’s office policy violation, but he [the sheriff] had nothing to assure me there was going to be any disciplinary action taken on anybody who was secretly recording,” Grosvenor said.

Edgar said it’s not against policy or state law to record conversations with witnesses, victims, suspects or other law enforcement agencies.

“I don’t blame the detective for doing so in a conversation that he has with Mrs. Grosvenor about an investigation,” Edgar said. “Law enforcement officers regularly review their recordings as part of their notes when conducting investigations and this is no different.”

Edgar said any concerns raised about McGuire have been handled internally and the sheriff’s office will be keeping him as a detective.

The prosecutor asked commissioners to consider rekeying her office or implementing other security measures. Commissioners said they would evaluate different security measures and would get back with her by the end of the week.

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Pocatello’s own returns: NFL star Taysom Hill to host meet-and-greet in Rexburg

Bailee Shaw

REXBURG, Idaho (KIFI) — An NFL superstar is coming to eastern Idaho. Taysom Hill, the New Orleans Saints tight end and former BYU quarterback, is making a special stop at Walmart in Rexburg this week.

Hill will be at the garden center tomorrow from 2 to 3:30 p.m. For a meet-and-greet with fans.

Hill grew up right here in Pocatello, attending Highland High School, and made his NFL debut with the Green Bay Packers in 2017.

He just finished his ninth season with the Saints and is known as the “human swiss army knife” for his ability to play multiple roles on offense and special teams.

The event is a partnership with Old Spice, celebrating football and the local community.

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Paso del Norte Health Foundation to Open Funding for Mental Health Programs

Nichole Gomez

El Paso, TX (KVIA-TV) – The Paso del Norte Health Foundation is now accepting Letters of Intent for programs that support mental health and emotional well-being across the region.

LOIs allow organizations to outline their ideas for evidence-based programs for funding consideration. The  PdNHF began accepting LOIs on March 4 and will continue receiving submissions through April 7.

Organizations interested in applying can visit the Paso del Norte Health Foundation website.

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Employees with disabilities find purpose through their work

Bradley Davis

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – The RM Soap Market in Colorado Springs hires people with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) to help customers in-store and package their product in their factory.

“This is something that I like to do, and someone with disabilities should get to do something that they like to do, and not something that they hate just because they can do it,” Kari said, an employee with IDD at the RM Soap Market.

Kari and her coworker, Joey, package the soap, give luxury hand treatments, greet customers and more at the shop and factory.

“Why do you like working?” KRDO13 reporter Bradley Davis asked Joey.

“Because it is my favorite thing, working here with my friends. I love working with Dad and everybody else.”

Joey’s dad, Rob Graham, also works at the RM Soap Market as its mySTORY program director. The program helps people in the IDD community set up their own website, gives them products to sell and allows them to make a commission without impacting their Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits.

Graham said Joey’s job has been a game-changer for his son.

“I saw that before he came here, there was a period there where we were waiting for support from the state, and he was just in his room, and he didn’t have any purpose, and it really affected him,” Graham said. “He’s excited to go and do something and interact with people, so he gets the purpose. He gets the community, and he’s back to being the Joey that we know!”

On March 21, for World Down Syndrome Awareness Day, the RM Soap Company is partnering with Nano 108 Brewery for a fundraiser event. Joey and other people with IDD worked together to brew their own beer. Their special brew will be on sale at the brewery on Saturday, and both Nano 108 and RM Soap will donate $1 a sale to causes helping people with disabilities.

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