16-year-old boxer out of Omaha wins 2 national boxing titles in 2 weeks

By Pete Cuddihy

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    OMAHA, Nebraska (KETV) — Two national championships in two weeks — that’s how 16-year-old Jazmin Gutierrez-Garcia is taking women’s boxing by storm.

With quick feet, fast hands and a relentless drive to improve, the Omaha teen is rapidly making a name for herself in the sport.

“I still come every day to get better and better — 1% better every day,” Gutierrez-Garcia said.

She first stepped into B&B Sports Academy five years ago at just 11 years old. What started as a new experience quickly became something more.

“It’s basically my second home,” she said.

It didn’t take long for her coach, Hugh Reefe, to recognize her potential.

“She just kept improving, and she doesn’t like to lose,” Reefe said.

Reefe took Gutierrez-Garcia under his wing, guiding her development and helping shape her approach to the sport.

“To have an athlete that appreciates the process — the cycle, the coaching, the way we’re doing things — and truly believes in it, that’s just a joy,” he said.

That commitment to the process has set her apart. Reefe says only a small fraction of young athletes who walk through the gym doors ever compete.

“Not everyone competes here — maybe 1 out of 10,” he said.

Gutierrez-Garcia began competing at 11, bringing with her a mindset that continues to define her in the ring.

“She’s just got a mindset like, ‘I’m not about to let this girl beat me,'” Reefe said.

Now, five years later, that mentality is paying off in a big way. She recently won two national championships in just two weeks.

“I am at the top level where other number one girls in my country are, and I feel ready for anything in the ring,” Gutierrez-Garcia said.

Her rapid rise is drawing comparisons to one of Omaha’s greatest fighters, Terence Crawford.

“What’s similar between her and Terence is when they were kids — if somebody punches you in the face, they don’t blink,” Reefe said.

Her success has already earned her a place in the gym’s rafters, alongside champions who came before her.

“We’re going to hang her poster right between Terence Crawford’s posters to show she’s a champion of this gym — a queen of the gym,” Reefe said.

But for Gutierrez-Garcia, the titles are just the beginning.

“I see myself on Team USA, training at the Olympic center and hopefully going to the Olympics,” she said.

And no matter how far her career takes her, she says her roots will remain in Omaha.

“I started here. This was my first gym, and I’ll forever stay in this gym,” she said.

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Mom goes viral after helping stranded Penn student get home from NCAA game

By Christie Ileto

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    PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — Amid the March Madness excitement in South Philadelphia, one mom is going viral for a different kind of assist, and it’s resonating with parents everywhere.

Rachel Blogg posted the video this week after helping a Penn student named Luke get back to campus following the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

“I have to be honest, I’m not sure he got back, and I just want to make sure that as a parent, and someone who cares, that he got back to his dorm safely,” Blogg said in her TikTok video.

She said Uber and Lyft rides were hard to find after the game, and while waiting for her own rideshare, she came across the stranded student whose phone had died.

Blogg said she ordered Luke a Lyft before heading to her hotel, but when the driver couldn’t find him, she went into full mom mode. She took to TikTok to make sure he made it back safely and even contacted Penn police the next day.

Luke’s parents later found the video and thanked her in the comments. It’s a message that touched Blogg and contributed to the clip going viral.

“It was just, ‘Thank you, thank you, thank you! Luke is my son,'” Blogg said. “He was genuinely so appreciative.”

Blogg said helping Luke felt natural as a parent herself.

“I have two college boys, 21 and 22, a junior and a senior in college. My oldest went to college out of state. I don’t know. It didn’t even cross my mind to not do it,” she said.

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Third-grader saved by classmates and teacher after choking on chip at school

By Cheyenne Corin

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    NORWOOD, Pennsylvania (WPVI) — An 8-year-old student at Norwood Intermediate School is thanking his classmates and teacher for coming to his rescue after choking.

“I was looking forward to eating my chips, and the chip went sideways, and it got stuck in my throat,” Damian Pascale, a third-grade student, said.

On Tuesday, Pascale was eating a salt-and-vinegar chip at lunch when his friends noticed something wasn’t right.

“I was looking at him; his face was all red,” said Jaxson Chin, a third-grade student.

Jaxson and two classmates, also friends of Damian, acted quickly.

“I went to go pat his back, then I told the other kids to go get the teacher,” Jaxson said.

“I was looking for a teacher, and I ran over, and I was panicking and told her Damian needs help, and Lincoln said he’s choking,” said Hunter Shields, another third-grade student.

Health and Physical Education teacher Tara Vaughn, who was on lunch duty nearby, responded immediately.

“I ran over, quickly assessed the situation. Tried to ask Damian some questions, and he wasn’t able to answer me, so I immediately knew he was choking,” Vaughn said.

She then performed the Heimlich maneuver.

“I didn’t want to scare him anymore, but I knew that’s what needed to be done in a minute to get that chip dislodged from his throat,” Vaughn said.

Vaughn said it is a skill she teaches her eighth-grade students, but she had never used it in her 24-year career.

“Thankful that she could do it,” said Lincoln Thomas, a third-grade student.

“I feel good, and I feel thankful for them and my teacher,” Damian said.

Damian later presented Vaughn with flowers at school as a thank you. School leaders also recognized the students’ quick actions, presenting them with a “superhero award.”

After the incident, Damian said he just wanted to return to class. He has since eaten chips again, but his family has told him to take smaller bites.

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Police find newborn baby dead in a porta-potty, after responding to a call at Waffle House

By Nicole Via y Rada

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    GRETNA, LA (WDSU) — A woman gave birth to a baby in a porta-potty in Gretna and is now wanted for second-degree murder, according to law enforcement.

Gretna police say they issued an arrest warrant for the mother, Lekesha Lemelle.

Police say they responded to the call of a woman giving birth at Waffle House on 52 Westbank Expressway. When they arrived on scene, police say Lemelle told officers that she gave birth to a baby but didn’t know how long ago or what the baby’s condition was.

Police say they were directed down the street from the Waffle House to a porta-potty in the Westside Shopping Center. That’s where they say they found a newborn, dead in the tank.

There is now an arrest warrant out for Lemelle for second-degree murder. Police say an autopsy revealed the baby was alive at birth.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Kansas City ‘Heart Forest’ near KCI could open to public ahead of 2026 World Cup

By Alan Shope, Nick Sloan

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    KANSAS CITY, MO (KMBC) — A group is working to restore what’s known as the “Heart Forest,” a heart-shaped grove of trees planted by volunteers decades ago just southwest of KCI.

The forest dates back to 1990, when volunteers planted thousands of trees that have since grown into a massive formation.

“All of a sudden, these trees that were this tall are now 50 feet tall,” said Brian Weinberg, executive director of the Foundation for Regeneration.

Weinberg said he first came across the Heart Forest online and decided to visit it in person.

After digging into its history, he learned it is believed to be the largest heart-shaped forest in the world.

Right now, the site is not open to the public, but that could soon change.

“It is not open to the public yet, but that’s exactly what we’re doing today. We want to fundraise about $100,000 in this next phase to be able to restore it and make it open so that people can come and enjoy the heart of America,” Weinberg said.

Crews have already started clearing and cleaning parts of the property. The goal is to have it ready in time for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, when Kansas City is expected to host visitors from around the globe.

Weinberg said the forest could serve as a symbolic first impression for travelers flying into the region.

“This is our welcome mat. We can show them who we really are. This Midwest heart spirit is really the impulse behind the entire project,” he said.

The forest spans more than 8 acres and includes more than 3,000 trees. Organizers hope to improve existing trails and turn the space into something closer to a public park.

“As you can probably see from the air, it looks like a heart, but it’s not a perfect heart shape, so we really want to reinforce the heart,” Weinberg said.

He said the project is about more than landscaping.

“Really, it’s that inspiring message of the heartland’s heart spirit,” he said.

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‘My baby was a good person’: Family mourns son hit and dragged by car

By Peyton Headlee

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    AIR OAKS, California (KCRA) — A Sacramento County family is sharing their heartbreak after they say their son, Shauvin Horsley, was hit by a car and dragged for almost a mile before he died on Monday night near Madison Avenue and Interstate 80.

Dalicha Johnson, Horsley’s mother, shared memories of her 26-year-old son, showing videos of him dancing and playing voicemails he left her saying, “I love you. Have a good rest of your evening.”

“My baby was a good person,” Johnson said. “To know him is to love him. And everybody that came across him, they loved him.”

Horsley was killed while trying to cross Madison Avenue on his bike. The California Highway Patrol reported that Horsley was not using a crosswalk when he was hit by the first car, followed by a second car that then dragged him for nearly a mile.

Horsley’s body fell from the car on Renick Way, just a few hundred feet from his family’s home, before the driver fled the scene.

“I picked up my baby’s shoe off of Madison,” she said. “Nobody deserved this. He definitely didn’t deserve it.”

Johnson said her son struggled with mental health and chose to live on the street, but he always had a family to come home to.

“We do need to be more aware of the unhoused population and see them. And just because they’re unhoused, it doesn’t make them any less of a person. They’re still people. They have family,” she said.

In the days following Horsley’s death, the California Highway Patrol announced an arrest in the case. KCRA 3 asked CHP for more details on the arrest and charges. We’re waiting to hear back.

Horsley’s family expressed gratitude for the justice the arrest brings as they begin to grieve his loss. They started a GoFundMe to help with funeral expenses.

“I just know I want to hold him. I just want to hold him,” Johnson said. “He had a good heart.”

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Warm up for the weekend with possible record highs

Danielle Mullenix

We are expecting a warm-up into the weekend across Eastern Idaho and Western Wyoming, with possible record highs climbing back into the 70s by Sunday. Friday will start with a light breeze and cooler air, but turn into blue skies by the afternoon. This will be followed by another cold front on Monday, which should bring some scattered showers to the region. This is accompanied by another complete pattern change with the pattern turning cooler and wetter for the second half of next week.

We start Friday morning with high clouds drifting through southeastern Idaho. High temperatures today will range from the upper 50s across the central mountains and eastern highlands to the low 60s across most of the Snake River Plain and Magic Valley. Highest wind gusts will be around 15-20mph. Partially cloudy conditions for the bulk of the region, with blue skies spilling into the afternoon hours. Lows will settle back down into the lower 40s and 30s overnight.

Quiet weather will be the continuous throughline for our weekend forecast, with winds decreasing each day and temperatures rising. High temperatures for Saturday begin climbing back up into the 60s and 70s fairly quickly, with dry weather remaining consistent. Sunday temperatures remain in the upper 60s and low 70s with wind gusts climbing back up into the 25-35 mph range.

The next cold front will arrive by Monday afternoon, so expect to dress for cooler, wetter weather by the top of next week.

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Officials aware of illegal fireworks operation for years, but didn’t enforce code before Esparto Explosion, grand jury says

By Daniel Macht

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    ESPARTO, California (KCRA) — Top Yolo County officials were aware of illegal fireworks operations at the site of the deadly 2025 Esparto explosions for at least three years but “no code enforcement occurred” and the lack of oversight directly led to “death and destruction,” according to a civil grand jury report.

The Yolo County Civil Grand Jury released the damning 32-page report, titled “Esparto Fireworks Explosion: Officials Knew, None Acted, ” on Thursday.

“Inexplicably, no code enforcement occurred, even though all dangerous fireworks had been banned by ordinance throughout rural Yolo County since 2001,” the report said. “In the absence of official oversight and enforcement, unmitigated expansion of the fireworks businesses operating at the site in Esparto led directly to death and destruction from the Esparto Fireworks Explosion.”

The report said the goal of the investigation was to understand the failure of the county’s code enforcement process.

Multiple fireworks blasts on July 1, 2025, obliterated a facility that was storing a massive cache of fireworks, killing seven workers from Devastating Pyrotechnics and leaving only debris behind.

The Civil Grand Jury is an independent body of citizen volunteers who are appointed to provide oversight of local government operations.

“The Board of Supervisors respectfully disagrees with the report’s suggestion that the County does not take code enforcement seriously,” Yolo County said in a statement about the grand jury’s finding. “While funding levels have varied historically, the Board has consistently supported and funded the County’s code enforcement program in recent (compared to previous) years and continues to recognize the essential role it plays in protecting community health and safety. Consistent with this commitment, the County has initiated internal reviews of its processes, including code enforcement procedures, and continues to work closely with local fire agencies and regional partners to strengthen coordination and communication.”

Other investigations have also been underway. Cal Fire’s state fire marshal said in February that it found signs of criminal activity and turned its findings over to the DA’s office.

Since the explosions, the state marshal’s office revoked the pyrotechnics licenses for two companies that operated at the Esparto site, determining that they had violated state fireworks laws and regulations.

In December, CAL/OSHA issued more than $200,000 in fines through 15 citations, three of which were noted to have been serious regulatory violations that the agency said were directly related to the deadly explosions.

A closer look at findings from the grand jury’s report

The grandy jury report notes that the Esparto explosion site had once belonged to a farmer, Jerry Matsumura, who used to put on fireworks displays.

But activity at the property evolved after his 2015 death into a “substantial business” called Devastating Pyrotechnics that went on to provide fireworks for shows across the state.

The report notes that Matsumura’s two daughters, Rieko Matsumura and Tammy Machado, took over the property and worked at the sheriff’s office. Machado’s husband, Sam Machado, worked as a lieutenant at the office.

Over the years, the owner of Devastating Pyrotechnics, Kenneth Chee, expanded his business at the Machados’ property and brought on additional containers to hold explosives, the report said.

While Devastating Fireworks obtained federal and state permits, it did not have a local use permit or business license, the report notes. And ordinances prohibited fireworks businesses anywhere in the county.

The report found that as part of the businesses’ expansion, it represented during the permitting process that it planned to store almonds.

“The report is unusual in the respect that we could not pinpoint the very thing that happened,” said Richard Zeiger, foreperson of the Yolo County Civil Grand Jury. “There is a whole list of things that we think might have contributed to it. One is this sort of atmosphere that you should be tolerant of activities that are taking place on farmlands, not look at them too closely. Other aspects have to do with just procedures that are used by the code enforcement people and the adequacy of those, and the tracking problems that occur with them.”

Around the same time in 2021, a Devastating Pyrotechnics employee who lived on the Machado property, Craig Cutright, also contacted planning division workers to see if he could establish a new fireworks business nearby.

Cutright, a volunteer firefighter for the Esparto Fire District, later started his own business Blackstar Fireworks on the Machado property.

Email says inspection will ‘tread lightly’

The report says that on June 2, 2022, a tipster told a County Building Services department official that the Machados’ property was being used by two pyrotechnics businesses.

County Building Services staff said in emails about an inspection that they would “tread lightly” because the property was owned by sheriff’s deputies “including deputies that we work with.”

KCRA 3 Investigates previously reported that Yolo County officials were aware of the red flags after we obtained the emails from a public records request.

The report says that building officials confirmed there were pyrotechnic businesses operating at the site but that Esparto fire officials said they were approved by the ATF and the site was storing “safe and sane” and dangerous fireworks. The staff were also told the new building would be used for agricultural purposes.

“Following the site visit, the County Community Services Department took steps toward a possible enforcement action against the property,” the report says. “But within days, this conversation about the site – at least in email records provided by the County – abruptly ceased. The department failed to take any action, and the fireworks business continued to quietly operate and even expand.”

The grand jury said it could not determine why planning and code enforcement staff never pursued the matter.

“There were times they’d been out on the property, they talked to property owners, and they knew something was happening there, and they just failed to do this, but this was a long time before the actual explosion. At the time they looked, the operations were smaller, and there was sort of a long history of the owner of that farm as a kind of super hobby of setting off fireworks,” Zeiger told KCRA.

The report explains several possible reasons why no one took action.

They included:

Officials may not have realized the operations they saw while inspecting a new building, given long-standing use of the property for a small-scale pyrotechnics business. Miscommunication over whether an enforcement letter had been sent with some workers thinking it had been. County officials thinking that state and federal officials were responsible for monitoring the businesses. (The grand jury did not find a record that Cal Fire inspected the property or whether the county had checked with the agencies.) The county’s building and code enforcement divisions were understaffed with a backlog and had no process of what actions to prioritize. The grand jury heard that code enforcement had been a low priority by the Board of Supervisors. It was possible that many in the community thought the business was an asset by providing employment and donating fireworks to fundraising shows for the local fire district.

“Whatever the cause – and the lack of subsequent documentation remains a significant concern to the Grand Jury – in the years after the new structure was completed in 2023, it appears that the pyrotechnic business activities continued at the site and, with the new building in place, greatly increased,” the report says.

The grand jury also found that since the explosions the county hasn’t “engaged in any sort of thorough or systematic review of its own processes or procedures.”

In all, the grand jury report found that nearly a dozen county employees over the years knew about the pyrotechnics operations but failed to take “any remedial action.”

“We think people failed and the system failed. There were a lot of people that knew about this. If one of them had stood up and said, ‘Wait, you can’t do this, there’s a danger,’ I think that might have stopped. No one did,” Zeiger said.

Board of Supervisors faulted

The report also faults the Board of Supervisors after hearing testimony that it “fostered a culture of tolerance for code violations.”

“Combined with the fact that the property was owned by officials who worked for the Sheriff’s Office, this approach seems to have contributed toward employees turning a blind eye toward a violation that eventually allowed an illegal business to expand and ultimately resulted in the death of seven people, destruction of the residential and commercial buildings on site, a 78-acre fire and damage to residences, buildings, and agricultural acreage on surrounding properties,” the report says.

Meanwhile, families of the victims have said they would sue government entities and individuals. A press release alleged that state and county employees “turned a blind eye due to a culture where friends are not subjected to the same oversight as the rest of us.”

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Asheville 6-year-old aims to win national contest to help her school after Helene

By Itinease McMiller

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    ASHEVILLE, North Carolina (WLOS) — A six-year-old in Asheville is hoping to have a big impact in a national competition, turning a contest into a mission to help her school recover from the impacts of Hurricane Helene.

Ava Thomas-Chandler may be young, but she’s already proving that you’re never too young to make a difference. She attends the Francine Delany New School for Children in Asheville and is currently in third place in the America’s Favorite Student contest.

If she wins, she plans to donate the $20,000 prize to her school, helping rebuild after damage from Hurricane Helene.

Her mother, Kristin Thomas, who serves as PTA president at the school, said Ava was motivated to help after seeing the storm’s impact.

“We got hit with the hurricane, and her thing was, ‘How can I help? ‘ And so I saw you could [donate the] $20,000, and I knew our school needed a new roof, and we have a little bit of playground damage from the hurricane,” Thomas said.

She said the community is still feeling the effects of the storm more than a year later.

“Just because it’s been a year, we can’t say that everything is all fine and dandy. You drive around the city, you still see damage,” Thomas said.

With the April 2 deadline approaching, supporters are hoping to push Ava into first place not just for the title, but for the chance to make her school safer for students and staff. Ava said she’s excited about the opportunity to give back.

“I’m so excited,” Ava said. “I’m going to give some to my school.” In March, the school got new grass to replace the mud left behind from Helene damage more than a year ago.

They are also hoping to use the money to replace the rock they had to lay near the play area because of the storm, to make the school safer for students and staff.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Oklahoma Senate advances bill to aid cold case investigations

By Jason Burger

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    OKLAHOMA CITY (KOCO) — The Oklahoma Senate has passed a bill that aims to help families of cold case victims by creating a formal case file review process, allowing them to request further investigation.

Maggie Zingman, a trauma psychologist and the mother of Brittany Phillips, who was murdered in Tulsa in September 2004, expressed her support for the bill.

“Trying to help other people not go through what I’ve gone through, especially in the last eight years of our 21-year cold case,” Zingman said.

She has been seeking answers for her daughter’s murder for over two decades without success.

“In the last eight years, my requests for cold case assistance have been turned down, so that was part of my impetus for this,” she said.

The bill, known as SB 1636, would provide families with a new avenue to request further investigation into cold cases.

“It gives families a voice to request a review, then it sets up parameters how soon a response must be made,” Zingman said.

Once a formal request is made, law enforcement would have 30 days to confirm receipt, and investigators would have six months to determine if further investigation is warranted. The case file review would include all information, evidence, records, and testimonies related to the case.

Zingman recalled the challenges faced when Brittany’s case was first declared cold.

“Two things, one, the DNA analysis was just coming into the picture, but genetic genealogy was still very tentative, you couldn’t even use it in court yet,” she said.

Advocates for other cold cases, such as the State Fair murders involving Cheryl Genzer and Lisa Pennington, have also supported the bill.

“The Fairgrounds murders, that’s what, 40 years old? Mine is 21,” Zingman said.

Rocky Pennington, father of Lisa Pennington, emphasized the importance of keeping these cases open.

“I want to let everybody know, hey, this case is open. The murderers are still out there,” he said.

The bill specifies that case reviews cannot be conducted by the original investigators, and in some instances, the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation would assist.

“For a lot of these small towns that don’t have big departments, and they want to do reviews, these reviews are going to go to OSBI — right now, OSBI can’t come in to our case, unless TPD asks for it,” Zingman said.

If investigators do not find any new information, the bill states that the case cannot be reviewed again for five years.

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