Missouri Supreme Court judge expected to hear case that could give a clear answer on which congressional map is in place

Alison Patton

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Missouri Supreme Court judge is expected to hear arguments in a redistricting lawsuit on Tuesday that could give voters, politicians and election authorities a final answer as to which congressional map is currently in place.

This lawsuit challenges the constitutionality of the law that enacts the map, House Bill 1. The judge’s decision could make several other lawsuits in lower courts irrelevant, along with a referendum to put the 2025 map on the November ballot.

“If she [the plaintiff] prevails in that case, then the referendum would be struck down, and all other cases relating to the referendum are no longer relevant because the law would be struck down,” said Richard von Glahn, the executive director of a group backing the referendum.

The general assembly passed a new congressional map in 2025 during a special session. The map, backed by President Donald Trump, could cut Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Kansas City) out of Congress and flip his seat to republican.

Time is critical in this case because local election authorities have about a month to update voter files before the August and November elections open.

“Those maps are locked so that people can participate in that, and for a number of days afterwards,” von Glahn said. “The maps do need to be finalized by the end of May.”

Spokesperson for the Secretary of State Rachael Dunn said voters will be tied to the 2025 congressional districts, and Secretary Denny Hoskins will let election authorities know what’s next when the April election is closed.

Cole County Judge Christopher Limbaugh denied plaintiff Merrie Suzanne Luther’s claims, ruling in the state’s favor on the basis that the Missouri constitution doesn’t expressly prohibit mid-decade redistricting.

Even if the high court sides with the lower court, the referendum still stands. The question then becomes, does the referendum stop the 2025 map from being implemented for the November election?

Plaintiffs Jake Maggard and Gregg Lombardi are asking a Cole County judge to provide an answer, and Von Glahn said he’s anticipating a decision this week.

People Not Politicians– the group backing the referendum– turned in over 300,000 signatures to Hoskins’ office in December. Local election authorities are currently verifying the signatures and will need to return them to the Hoskins’ office in the summer.

Von Glahn said the referendum has more than enough signatures required by law to get it on the ballot. He said the group sunshine requested the certified signatures from the Secretary of State’s Office, which is how they know the referendum is qualified to go on the ballot.

Boone County Clerk Brianna Lennon told ABC 17 News in February that her office was nearing the end of verification, but many other clerks weren’t yet done.

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Firearm Theft Leads to Three Arrests in Santa Maria

Alissa Orozco

SANTA MARIA, Calif. (KEYT) – Three men were arrested Saturday night in connection to a firearm robbery, and several other charges in Santa Maria.

On Saturday, March 7th around 12:30pm Santa Maria Police reported to the 900 block of West Morrison to a report of stolen property inside a residence. Upon arrival, officers located the victim and learned of three men who had visited the apartment to use the music studio located inside.

Police say that according to the victim, the three men arrived and spent some time inside the residence. It was shortly after that the victim noticed a firearm was missing from the living room.

During a confrontation, one of the men lifted his shirt to reveal a handgun in his waistband, threatening to shoot the victim. All three soon left in a vehicle.

Review of surveillance video from inside the residence shows one of the suspects pick up the victim’s handgun – a black Taurus GX2 handgun valued at approximately $420 – and hand it to another suspect to conceal it in his waistband.

Officers located and detained all three suspects later that evening around 5:55pm. Officers located two handguns, including the stolen handgun and an unserialized “ghost gun.”

The three men were arrested on suspicion of robbery, weapons violations, and conspiracy. According to the Santa Maria Police Department, the men are also believed to be associated with a local criminal street gang.

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Two seriously injured in Morgan County crash

Marie Moyer

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man and a woman were seriously injured in a crash in Morgan County early Sunday morning.

The crash occurred shortly before 12:30 a.m. on Anchorage Road, just east of Coffee Road, according to a Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report.

A 46-year-old Gravois Mills woman was being driven west by a 29-year-old Versailles man in a 1989 Lincoln Town Car, the report says. The car went off the right side of the road and hit a tree.

Both passengers were taken to Lake Regional Hospital by ambulance with serious injuries. The man was not wearing a seatbelt. The car was totaled.

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World War II veteran living in the Bay Area turning 105

By John Ramos

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    WINDSOR, California (KPIX) — It’s been 80 years since World War II ended, and the world is a very different place because of it. One Windsor man was there to see all of it, and on Saturday, he was honored with a vintage military salute for his 105th birthday.

“All of the decisions have enabled me to live a perfect life of 105,” Dick Sharp said about his impending birthday. “It’s OK. I just don’t recommend it.”

One of those decisions happened in 1941, when he enlisted in the Army Air Corp, three months before Pearl Harbor was attacked. As the country geared up for war, Sharp already had his pilot’s license, so they made him a flight instructor. But in 1945, late in the war, he was sent to the Pacific island of Tinian to fly B-29 bombers, sometimes joining 300 other planes as they pounded Tokyo.

“It looked like one hell of a lot of fireworks over the city, with the searchlights, the fire on the ground, the tracer ammunition coming up,” he recalled. “And there was some concern about, jeez, I’m going to have to fly right into just an enormous display of Fourth of July fireworks.”

The nightly missions continued until one day a plane showed up at the base that everyone was told not to get near. It was the Enola Gay, which delivered the atomic bomb on Hiroshima.

Later, Sharp moved into civilian life, becoming a dentist and raising a family. But, still, the military brotherhood remained strong. On his 100th birthday, he met fellow pilot Larry Scott, who flew during the Cold War in 1953.

“I often, when I meet someone, after a few minutes, I’ll ask them if they had been in the military,” said Scott. “Because there is kind of — It’s not a big deal, but it’s kind of a thing.”

It was a big deal on Saturday, as a parade of vintage Army vehicles passed by Sharp’s home in Windsor, a salute to wish him a happy birthday. He recalled the years following the war as “the best of times,” when education was readily available and opportunities were everywhere.

He said he was lucky to have lived through it and as he pondered his birthday, he offered an unusual salute to his parents:

“I’d like to say thank you Olive and Lowell for having sex and creating my life!” Sharp said.

Sharp will officially turn 105 on Wednesday. He said he thought somebody may be planning a special dinner for him, but he would rather just stay home. And he may have found the perfect partner, because at age 94, Michele Harris has an equally pragmatic attitude about why the couple is not getting married.

“Well, what’s the point at our age? I’m not apt to get pregnant. I don’t think there’s any point,” she said. “He doesn’t want to get married … You know, ‘Been there’ and ‘Done that.’ Dick’s only been married once, but I was married three times. So, you know, that’s it.”

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Colleagues unite to help coworker’s daughter after deadly crash

By Lauren Pozen

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    VENTURA COUNTY, California (KCAL, KCBS) — Flowers now cover Anabel Zamora’s desk with pictures of her daughter, Caroline, tucked behind them after the 42-year-old mother was killed in a head-on collision in Ventura County last week.

“The type of mother she was, she was larger than life,” said Zamora’s boss, Michael Farhood.

The deadly crash happened on Saturday, Feb. 28, in the northbound lanes of SR-23 near Los Angeles Avenue, according to the California Highway Patrol. Investigators said a pickup truck driver collided with Zamora’s car after he tried to speed through the center median to pass traffic.

“This guy was flying, and what, to get someplace 10 minutes faster? It makes no sense,” Farhood said. “It was quite surprising. I actually drove by the accident right after it happened, having no idea that it was her that was involved.”

The crash also killed a passenger in the pickup and injured Zamora’s sister. Paramedics also rushed Zamora’s 10-year-old daughter, Caroline, to the hospital.

“She had a couple of broken ribs and lost her spleen, part of her pancreas and part of her large intestine. She remembers the whole accident,” Farhood said. “She kept asking for her mom. That’s always tough for the family.”

Zamora’s colleagues said she worked her way up at the company over a decade to support her daughter.

“Not only was she here for us as a boss, she was with us outside,” colleague Ann Harvaugh said. “She was our bodyguard. She was a voice of reason.”

They said life without her is unimaginable, but they’ll be there for Caroline, showing her how much her mother was loved.

“It is very quiet here,” colleague Krystal Salgado said. “It’s hard. We try to tell each other it’s going to be OK, but we know it’s going to be ok. She would want us to be strong for her and everything.”

Zamora’s coworkers have set up a crowdfunding campaign to support Caroline while she recovers.

CHP said charges are pending against the driver of the pickup truck, who walked away with moderate injuries. Investigators said impairment does not seem to be a factor.

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Meet Lois Widmark, the 104-year-old who was a WWII “Code Girl”

By John Lauritsen

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    IVANHOE, Minnesota (WCCO) — When Lois Widmark turned 104 in January, the party wasn’t quite as big, but that’s OK. These days she spends a lot of time doing what she loves at her home in Ivanhoe, Minnesota, alongside her 5-year-old cat Muggins.

“I read a lot. I embroidered 52 dish towels two years ago,” Lois Widmark said. “Muggins and I have a lot of time together.”

Time at home is time for reflection. In 1944, when Lois Widmark was 22, she wanted to help with the war effort. So she and a friend decided to join the Navy.

“That’s what people said, I let my patriotism get the best of me,” she said.

She became part of a women’s branch called WAVES, which stood for “Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Services.” Lois Widmark and thousands of others were given the task of cracking German and Japanese codes for the U.S. military. They were known as the “Code Girls.”

“There were a lot of girls doing that,” she said. “We had to be at least 5 feet tall and weigh 95 pounds.”

They worked with mechanical devices called “Bombes” to crack the codes, much like the one invented by British mathematician Alan Turing. Lois Widmark and the WAVES were highly effective.

“I only wish I would have joined sooner,” she said.

She moved back to Nebraska after the war and went to college on the GI bill. She got a teaching degree and then moved to Ivanhoe after marrying her husband, Arnold. He also served in World War II.

“Both my parents are World War II veterans. That didn’t happen very often that both parents were World War II veterans,” said son Alan Widmark.

In recent years, Lois Widmark wrote a memoir called “Echoes of My Life.” It details her childhood, her time in the military and how she and her family built a life in western Minnesota.

She sells the memoir and a photo for $100, with all the money going towards a scholarship for future teachers at Southwest State University. Afterall, she’s their oldest living alum.

Lois Widmark also does her best to keep up with other women who were part of World War II, and “The Greatest Generation.”

“Not many of them even get to 100 before they’re gone,” she said.

A sad reality, but also the reason why she believes it’s her duty to tell their story and carry on their legacy.

“World War II was everybody’s war,” she said.

Lois Widmark was appointed to welcome back Admiral William Halsey to the Naval headquarters after the war. She says in addition to her husband Arnold, her brother Sonny also served in World War II.

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Viral video renews concerns over self‑driving cars in emergencies

By Erin Jones

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    AUSTIN, Texas (KTVT) — A viral video out of Austin is raising questions about how self‑driving cars respond during emergencies.

A man recorded what appears to be a Waymo vehicle blocking first responders during the deadly shooting on West Sixth Street.

A Waymo robotaxi sits in the roadway as an ambulance tries to reach the scene. The car inches forward but does not clear the way.

Then an officer appears to communicate with the company through the car’s external speaker system before getting inside and driving it away.

When asked about the incident, Waymo told CBS News Texas the vehicle immediately began making a U-turn to clear the way, and a nearby officer assisted.

Austin-Travis County EMS Chief Robert Luckritz addressed the incident on Monday.

“We were on scene within 57 seconds, and so in the grand scheme of the impact on the overall incident, we don’t believe it had any impact on patient outcomes,” he said. “I will say that we’re already in touch with Waymo and the autonomous vehicles to give them our concerns and work with them in order to try and address this moving forward.”

“That’s great if, in fact, that was the case and they were very lucky, but what’s going to happen next time?” Witherite Law Group Managing Attorney John Nohinek said.

Nohinek has been tracking autonomous vehicle cases and is especially concerned about one in Atlanta.

“The Waymo had a passenger, drove past emergency vehicles and into an active crime scene,” he said. “They have failed to stop and pass school buses. Failure to yield the right of way both to vehicles, and pedestrians, more importantly, it’s very concerning.”

Nohinek says this prompted the National Transportation Safety Board to open a formal safety investigation into Waymo.

“They don’t do that lightly,” he said. “That means that there is a higher degree of safety risk that they need to investigate.”

While the Austin incident was brief and temporarily blocked an ambulance headed to the shooting scene, it is a new safety concern for critics who are urging cities to put the brakes on autonomous vehicles.

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Dispute between Mexican dance studio, neighbors prompts police investigation

By Victor Jacobo

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    CHICAGO (WBBM) — A Mexican folk dance studio in Chicago’s Avondale neighborhood is speaking out after they said neighbors threw water at students and complained about the noise.

Both the studio and the neighbors spoke with CBS News Chicago about what happened.

The dance group said they moved into the Avondale location about a year ago, and both they and the neighbors in this confrontation said concerns were shared before.

Ballet Folklórico de Chicago trains and teaches students in Mexican folk dancing and culture.

“It’s like a family, I love the classes, I love the instructors,” said student Gabriela Azueta.

Around 10 p.m. Friday, Azueta said students were exiting out the back of the studio, where they are often picked up by parents. During which, the neighbors could be seen throwing water, saying, “You’re lucky ICE isn’t here.” Their faces were blurred as they had not been charged in this incident.

“That is so dangerous for kids. We can’t tolerate all this behavior,” Azueta said.

She said the studio has since contacted police.

“We are raising our voices because we need a safe community for our kids,” she said.

They are taking steps to ensure students and families can enter and exit the building safely, as she said the studio has had conflicts with the neighbors in the incident before.

“It’s scary to see this every time you come here just to take a class, and it’s not fair for the students, especially kids,” Azueta said.

Those neighbors spoke with CBS News Chicago, but did not want to appear on camera. They said noise from the studio has been an ongoing issue.

“This is not about last night, it’s about the last two years we’ve been living there. Man, it’s been a continuous, they’re just noisy, man. They’re rude,” they said.

They said that since the video was posted, they are concerned for their safety, even getting death threats.

“We’re getting death threats, our property is being like threatened to be damaged, and it’s not even our property. It’s crazy, it’s scary,” the woman said.

Social media comments have alleged they are racist, which they deny.

“Trust me when I say I am not pro-ICE, OK, I am not a racist, nor is she. We are both Latinos,” the man said.

Both said they wished the issue had not come to Friday night’s incident.

“I lost my cool. – yeah, we both did. – but there’s a reason why I lost it, I’ve had enough. And speaking reasonable, respectfully just hasn’t worked for us,” they said.

Ultimately, they hope to come to a resolution with the studio.

It should have been avoided a long time ago, but nobody was listening to us,” the woman said.

The neighbors said they want to speak with the studio to work this out. Chicago police said they’re continuing to investigate the incident.

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High school soccer star shares journey of losing ability to walk to returning to the pitch

By Krystle Rich

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    DEPTFORD, New Jersey (KYW) — Deptford High School junior defender Onaliese Cosme has been in love with soccer since she was 4 years old. It’s no surprise she made varsity as a freshman.

“I was really proud of myself, I was like, it’s so cool,” Cosme said. “My head was definitely held high.”

Cosme finished her freshman season despite a nagging pain in her hips, a pain she could no longer ignore in the spring.

“I couldn’t walk,” Cosme said. “I couldn’t even last a full day of school. I had to go on crutches for a while.”

Desperate for answers, the medical merry-go-round began with doctors.

“‘I don’t think it’s real.’ That’s basically what [doctors] told me and my mom,” Cosme said. “I was really mad because it’s not in my head, like I literally can’t walk.”

Answers finally came after an MRI that revealed hip dysplasia on both sides — the round-shaped thigh bone was unable to fit in the hip socket, causing severe pain. Left untreated, she would need a hip replacement in her 20s, have complications with future childbirth and no longer be able to play soccer.

“Never in a million years would I have thought, oh my god, I need hip surgery at 15,” she said.

“Seeing what she was going through was hard because, as a parent, you want to protect them,” Emily Wilson, Cosme’s mother, said.

Cosme did four months of physical therapy that were unsuccessful before surgeons performed a periacetabular osteotomy on her right hip, breaking her pelvis in four places and inserting four screws.

“I just didn’t think I’d ever play soccer again,” Cosme said.

Eight months of recovery required Cosme to miss the first month of her sophomore year of school and the entire soccer season. She was unable to bear any weight for two months.

“I don’t know who I am without soccer,” Cosme said, “so when I couldn’t play, I felt really defeated, and being isolated from my friends was really rough.”

Cosme still couldn’t stay away from the game, supporting her teammates by becoming the statistician and taking pictures from the sideline.

“I’m not going to say it was easy because I wanted to be on the field,” Cosme said, “but they made me feel like I was still part of the team.”

“It was really nice to see her be out there as difficult as I imagine it had to have been for her,” Dana Phillips, girls’ head soccer coach at Deptford High School, said. “I started to see her smile and laugh with the other girls. We missed her.”

After a summer ramp-up, Cosme made her return to the pitch in her junior year.

“They didn’t know if she would be able to return to soccer. Oni always knew,” Wilson said. “While her friends were having fun and enjoying their summer, she had a personal trainer. She was at this high school every day in the summer.”

“Everyone was really excited for me to come back to the field,” Cosme said, “and I was so thrilled. I never give up. I don’t take anything for granted. I did at one point, I was like, ‘I want to quit soccer.’ And when I didn’t have soccer, I was like, ‘Oh my god, I want soccer.'”

Gratitude was the game-changer on and off the field for this South Jersey high school soccer star.

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Massive sinkhole in Philadelphia’s Old City neighborhood disrupts life for neighbors, businesses

By Eva Andersen, Sean Tallant

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    PHILADELPHIA (KYW) — A large sinkhole that appeared on a historic street in Philadelphia’s Old City neighborhood around Christmas has continued to disrupt traffic and frustrate neighbors and nearby businesses, some of whom say they’re still waiting for answers about when it will be repaired.

The sinkhole sits along the 200 block of Church Street, a narrow roadway lined with homes, small businesses and frequent tourist foot traffic.

Mittul Patel, general manager of Old City Coffee, said the location is normally one of the area’s biggest draws.

“It’s a beautiful, charming street,” Patel said.

But right now, he said, the large hole blocking the roadway is making it harder for his customers to access the coffee shop.

“Obviously it makes it harder to walk across, do deliveries, trash pickup,” Patel said.

A nearby resident who declined to share his name said the issue first appeared in late December.

“There was a period of time when our water was cut off… on Christmas Day, in fact,” the neighbor said.

While residents say water service was restored, the sinkhole has remained in the roadway for months.

Old City resident Stephanie Ott described the situation as “chaotic.”

“It’s been a big issue with the through traffic, because now people can’t get down Church Street,” Ott said.

Neighbors said city crews have come to work on the site intermittently, often during overnight hours.

Neighbors say, the sinkhole has also become a noticeable sight for visitors and tourists, adding they worry about the impression it leaves on tour groups.

“It shows that people don’t care,” a resident said.

With Philly expected to welcome large numbers of visitors this summer, some business owners say they hope the problem is resolved soon.

“I understand that things have to get worked on, but this does seem to be dragging on for quite some time,” Patel said. “It would be great to have this fixed up before all the tourists come for the summer.”

CBS News Philadelphia has reached out to the Philadelphia Water Department to confirm what caused the sinkhole and when repairs may be completed. We are still waiting to hear back.

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