Blue Springs man charged with several child sex crimes in Pettis County

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Blue Springs man was charged on Saturday in Pettis County with nine child sex crimes.

Brice Story was charged with three counts of second-degree statutory rape, three counts of first-degree endangering the welfare of a child and three counts of incest.

An arraignment was held on Monday and Story appeared by video from the Pettis County Jail. A mugshot was not immediately available on Monday. A hearing is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 31.

The complaint filed in the case alleges Story sexually assaulted the same victim a number of times from Aug. 1-30, 2024, and March 1-June 30, 2025.

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District 28: School choice takes center stage in three-way rematch

Sean Dolan

By: Sean Dolan

Originally posted on IdahoEdNews.org on March 23, 2026

Editor’s note: This story is part of a series of candidate profiles Idaho Education News will publish ahead of the May 19 primary election. We’re highlighting competitive races impacting education policy. Click here to see our Elections webpage featuring a list of all candidates and much more. Click here to see your voter information. Follow our elections blog for breaking news and insights.

POCATELLO, Idaho — The same three candidates who ran in 2024 will face off again in May for District 28 House Seat A.

All three have different personal experiences that have shaped their opinions on school choice.

One attended a rural Idaho school with limited resources, another attended segregated schools in Georgia, and one is a transplant who sought out Idaho’s conservative values.

Rep. Rick Cheatum, R-Pocatello, is seeking a third term. He faces a three-way rematch with James Lamborn and Mike Saville. The victor will face Democrat Kim Jackman in November.

Rick Cheatum, James Lamborn and Mike Saville (Photos courtesy of campaign websites and social media)

Cheatum won the 2024 primary with 40% of the vote, Lamborn received 33.2% and Saville received 26.8%.

The race had a massive spending discrepancy from their respective campaigns and from political action committees.

Saville’s campaign spent $4,007 with no influence from PACs. Lamborn’s campaign spent $9,354 and a PAC that combats political extremism, called Defend and Protect Idaho, spent $3,490 to oppose Lamborn.

PACs were more interested in Cheatum. Two spent a combined $73,416 to oppose him, and several PACs spent a combined $26,167 to support him. Cheatum’s campaign spent $36,020. Total spending reached $135,603.

It’s too early to tell how much money PACs will pour into the rematch this spring.

Incumbent: Rick Cheatum

Occupation: Retired businessman
History of elected service: Eight years on the Pocatello City Council. Two terms in the Idaho House, elected 2022 and 2024.
Campaign website: cheatumforidaho.com

 

 

Every term is a learning experience, Cheatum said, and he thinks he can become more valuable to his district with a third.

“I’d like to give it another shot,” he said.

The retired businessman has a special interest in rural schools. He was raised in a town of 2,000 and noticed a discrepancy in education when he went to college.

“It didn’t take long to realize that as a rural student, I didn’t get an equal education to those kids who lived in the metropolitan areas,” he said.

The deficiency he’s seen in rural school funding is part of why he last year opposed House Bill 93, the bill that created the $50 million Parental Choice Tax Credit. He said he’s not sure if the tax credit will take resources away from public schools, but he knows schools have a lot of needs. He said the tax credit is a redistribution of wealth.

“I think there’s an issue with it, yes, when we have so many needs across this state, not only in rural areas, but you know, we’ve cut highway transportation funding this year very dramatically,” Cheatum said.

His opposition to school choice bills put a target on his back in the 2024 primary.

The Idaho Federation for Children PAC spent $63,546 to oppose Cheatum two years ago. Make Liberty Win, a Virginia-based national PAC, spent $9,870 against him.

While the Idaho Federation for Children sounds like an in-state group, nearly all of its 2024 funding, $574,000, came from Alabama-based national super PAC AFC Victory Fund. Billionaire Jeff Yass, who supports private school vouchers, gave the super PAC $8.7 million in 2023 and 2024.

“It’s been really hard,” Cheatum said. “I certainly can’t match the donations.”

On other education issues, Cheatum said he supports career and technical education and the Idaho Launch grant program, which helps cover college tuition for in-demand careers.

“We need people to work as plumbers and carpenters and nurses and things that don’t necessarily take a four-year degree,” he said. “And I think that’s where we’ve kind of ignored our workforce in this state.”

Cheatum said he doesn’t go negative when he campaigns and prefers to talk about his own accomplishments. He said his philosophy comes from Braver Angels, a nonprofit that promotes civil discourse. 

Challenger: James Lamborn

Occupation: Self-employed day trader and investor
Other experience: Head of security at his church
Campaign website: lambornforidaho.com

 

 

Lamborn declined a phone interview with EdNews through his campaign’s press contact, Bjorn Handeen of Las Vegas-based political consulting firm RMC Strategy. Handeen asked EdNews for written questions and Lamborn responded via email Friday.

According to its website, RMC has worked with multiple candidates in Idaho, including Scott Herndon, Sen. Tammy Nichols, Rep. Lucas Cayler, Rep. Cornell Rasor, Sen. Brandon Shippy, Sen. Codi Galloway and Rep. Elaine Price. The American Federation for Children is also a client.

In his email, Lamborn said he brings real-world experience from the private sector, where he has managed operations and worked with budgets.  He’s also active in his church. In a follow-up message, Handeen said Lamborn is a self-employed day trader and investor who manages his own portfolio.

He’s a transplant from Washington State who moved to American Falls after the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 presidential election, according to his website. These events “revealed that our home state had become increasingly hostile toward those who shared our conservative values and Christian faith,” he wrote on his website.

Fundraising – 2026 Election Cycle To Date

Rick Cheatum

Beginning cash balance: $10,139
Total contributions: $11,520
Total expenditures: $11,004
Ending cash balance: $11,465

James Lamborn

Beginning cash balance: $4,939
Total contributions: $21,631
Total expenditures: $12,798
Ending cash balance: $9,445

Mike Saville

Beginning cash balance: $0
Total contributions: $0
Total expenditures: $113
Ending cash balance: $0

Source: Idaho Sunshine, as of March 23

But after living in American Falls for a few years, he wrote on his website, he noticed the area’s elected officials do not represent the conservative values of its residents.

Cheatum is a “counterfeit Republican” and a “wolf in sheep’s clothing,” Lamborn wrote on his website. District 28 deserves a constitutional, Christian, unapologetically conservative Republican who will fight for lower taxes and a strong, safer future for our children, his website states.

On the issues page on his website, Lamborn has sections on school choice and parental rights.

“It is now time that we as free Idahoans, virtuous conservatives, and autonomous adults correct our prior oversight … and take back, with all righteous authority bestowed unto us by nature and nature’s God, total subjugation over that which belongs to us solely: the type and amount of education to which we allow our children’s adherence,” the website reads.

Lamborn’s written response to EdNews was more moderate on school choice.

“I support giving parents more flexibility and options in their children’s education, including tools like the Parental Choice Tax Credit,” Lamborn wrote in an email. “At the same time, I believe any program should be implemented carefully, with accountability and a clear understanding of long-term costs.”

On career training and Idaho Launch, Lamborn wrote in email that he supports Idaho’s workforce. However, Idaho Launch is a large program and needs careful oversight.

“I believe we should continue to evaluate Idaho Launch to ensure it is targeted, effective, and aligned with real workforce needs before considering any expansion,” he wrote.

Lamborn believes it is important for everyday citizens to step forward and serve.

“I want to help ensure that state government remains focused on its core responsibilities, supports families, and uses taxpayer dollars wisely,” Lamborn wrote in an email.

Challenger: Mike Saville

Occupation: Retired
Experience: U.S. Air Force disabled veteran, 32 years at IBM.
Campaign website: mikesavilleforidaho.com

 

 

Saville says he’s not a “party guy.”

He ran for the Idaho Legislature as a Democrat in 2016, 2018 and 2020, then as an independent in 2022 and a Republican in 2024.

“I’m for the country first, not for the party,” Saville told EdNews. “This party that’s in Idaho is a syndicate.”

Saville, 81, served his country for six years in the U.S. Air Force from 1962 to 1968 and later worked for IBM for 32 years.

He said he contracted polio as a child, which has shaped his views on the importance of vaccines. He later attended segregated schools in Georgia in the 1950s, which he did not like. He said he was almost kicked off a bus for sitting next to a Black woman.

“All those things from that experience, you know, as far as racial discrimination, I just hated that. I mean, I didn’t understand it, but you had to go along with the program,” Saville said.

He said those experiences in the South are part of why he opposes Idaho’s $50 million private school tax credit program. He is for public education.

“As far as I’m concerned, this privatizing education is a back door to segregation, and I experienced that in Georgia,” Saville said.

Coming from a military family, Saville said he’s not a fan of President Donald Trump. Around the time Saville was serving in the military, Trump received a military exemption from the war in Vietnam.

“Mr. Trump, in this household, he’s known as ‘bone spur,’” Saville said.

Saville said he’s running because he wants to change the direction of the state. He doesn’t like what’s happened to Idaho over the last 40 years. He specifically mentioned the hardline conservative Gang of Eight and said that group is wrong.

“I am a different kind of person, I guess, but I try to do things as best I can,” Saville said.

According to Idaho’s election database, Saville has run in nine elections. The only races he’s won were uncontested Democratic primaries.

“I might never get elected, but I’m gonna give it a shot,” he said.

EdNews candidate survey

Scroll through the document below to hear from the candidates in their own words.

View this document on Scribd

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Bill allowing city councils to hire, fire library directors goes to governor 

Ryan Suppe

By: Ryan Suppe and Kevin Richert

Originally posted on IdahoEdNews.org on March 23, 2026

BOISE, Idaho — A bill that would give city councils authority to hire and fire directors of city-owned libraries easily cleared the Senate. 

Currently, library boards oversee the hiring and firing of library directors. House Bill 715 would require city council approval for these decisions. 

“Cities with their own libraries are forced to rely solely on an unelected board of trustees to hire and fire the library director,” said sponsoring Sen. Ben Toews, R-Coeur d’Alene. “This bill restores accountability by giving the elected city council a direct voice in these personnel decisions.”

The bill passed along party lines. The House passed the bill earlier this month, also along party lines. It now goes to the governor’s desk. 

Sen. Ron Taylor, D-Hailey, said the change could “politicize” library director positions. A city council member could, for instance, pressure a librarian to remove books that conflict with their political beliefs. 

“This undermines the library’s role as a neutral space for learning and as a place to access diverse perspectives,” he said. “There’s also a threat to intellectual freedom.”

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Man accused of exposing himself at Lake of the Ozarks bar; allegedly ran away after police used stun gun

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Lake Ozark man has been charged with two misdemeanors after he was accused of exposing himself at a Miller County bar on Friday.

Jeremy Chorpening, 38, was charged on Saturday with resisting arrest and first-degree sexual misconduct. He was arrested, but posted a $2,000 bond, according to Monday court filings. An initial court appearance is scheduled for 9 a.m. Wednesday, May 13.

The probable cause statement says police were called at 10:48 p.m. to Mary Byrde’s in the 1200 block of Bagnell Dam Boulevard, where a security guard and multiple patrons reported seeing Chorpening expose himself. He was found in another nearby bar, S.N.A.F.U., and was ordered to come outside by police, the statement says.

Chorpening allegedly started resisting when police tried to detain him, the statement says. Police used a stun gun, but Chorpening was not affected, court documents say. He then ran away, but was later found behind Wok-N-Roll, the statement says.

While Chorpening was being booked unto the jail, police received a call about a 2018 Ford F-150 Raptor being damaged during the arrest, the statement says.

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Farm turns to old-school conservation, new crop to weather drought concerns

CNN Newsource

Originally Published: 23 MAR 26 15:01 ET

By Averie Klonowski

Click here for updates on this story

    SPANISH FORK, Utah (KSTU) — As extreme heat and drought conditions impacts nearly all of Utah, a seventh-generation family farm in Spanish Fork is relying on long-practiced conservation methods and a new, colorful crop to weather the challenge.

“This is a whole new ball game. This is the driest I can remember,” said Rex Larsen, owner and operator of Larsen Family Farms.

Larsen explained that the challenge of farming is that no two years are alike, but this year is particularly difficult.

“The least amount of snowpack that we’ve had. Our Spanish Fork River is about 50% normal,” he said.

For Larsen, farming is a legacy he feels compelled to continue. His family has been working on the land for seven generations.

“Barely, wheat, alfalfa, corn, pumpkins, and now tulips,” said Larsen. To protect that legacy, the family has spent years creating water conservation techniques.

“Nearly every one of our ditches is lined with concrete, so the water will stay in the ditches and go out into the field,” Larsen explained. “Most of our land is laser-leveled, so it’ll irrigate more efficiently.”

The farm also captures and recycles any runoff water.

While Larsen plans for some of his fields to remain idle, his daughter, Kara Lewis, had an idea to ensure the farm can still profit.

“We’ve planted 250,000 tulips here on our farm,” Lewis said.

She planted the seeds back in December, selecting a crop that is better suited to the current conditions.

“They are very drought resistant. They don’t like a lot of water in the spring,” Lewis said.

Using a specialized system that gets water directly to the crop rows, the family is continuing their conservative approach to watering. Larsen hopes the tulips will be ready for the public to see within a week or two, providing a way to supplement the farm’s income when other fields can’t grow anything.

Larsen said water conservation is something most farmers strive for, adapting to whatever conditions they face.

“Those years that it’s dry, you learn to conserve,” he said. “Those years that it’s wet, you learn to pivot and take what you can.”

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.

The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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HIV cases spike in SE Idaho, health officials stress testing and prevention

Maile Sipraseuth

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Southeastern Idaho health officials are sounding the alarm after a sharp, sudden rise in local HIV diagnoses.

In just the first three months of 2026, healthcare providers have diagnosed seven new cases of HIV, matching the average number of cases typically seen over an entire year for the past five years.

While the numbers are concerning, experts at Eastern Idaho Public Health (EIPH) emphasize that advances in medicine mean HIV is both highly preventable and manageable.

“Hearing that cases are increasing can feel scary, but it really comes down to awareness,” said Rachel Mugleston, Health Strategies Program Manager at EIPH. “Getting tested for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections is just a standard part of routine healthcare.”

Today, more tools than ever are available to prevent HIV. Prevention strategies include:

Use condoms the right way every time you have sex.

Never sharing needles, syringes, or other drug injection equipment.

Using PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) and PEP (post-exposure prophylaxis) medications, which your healthcare provider can prescribe.

The only way to know your status is to get tested. Eastern Idaho Public Health recommends that individuals between the ages of 15 and 65 get tested for HIV at least once as part of routine health care, and more frequently for those with increased risk factors. All pregnant women should be tested at their first prenatal visit and again in the third trimester if at increased risk.

For more information on testing, click HERE.

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Man accused of breaking into MU frat house found on roof of car rental business

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man who was accused of breaking into a fraternity house on College Avenue in Columbia was eventually found on top of a Hertz Car Rental on Friday.

Willem Campbell, 31, of Columbia, was charged with first-degree burglary, two counts of felony stealing, one count of misdemeanor stealing and an infraction of second-degree trespassing. He is being held at the Boone County Jail on a $25,000 bond. A court appearance was scheduled for Monday afternoon.

One of the probable cause statements says Campbell was found on the roof of Hertz Car Rental at 1905 Range Line St. He climbed down when police arrived and claimed he was sleeping on the roof, the statement says. Police found Campbell with several stolen credit and debit cards, court documents say.

A second probable cause statement claims on March 15, Campbell illegally entered Sigma Nu – a fraternity at the University of Missouri – located on 710 College Avenue. Campbell allegedly went into a bedroom and stole someone’s wallet, the statement says.

Campbell was eventually escorted out of the building by several residents and one of the residents took a photo of Campbell, the statement says.

The victim allegedly kept a tracking card inside the wallet and found Campbell at an address on Rosemary Lane, the statement says.

The photograph taken by the Sigma Nu resident was allegedly used “for identification purposes through facial recognition software and also distributed to local law enforcement agencies in Boone County,” the statement says.

The statement says Campbell was identified as a suspect by a Columbia police officer and facial recognition software.

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Funeral procession for former Mid-Missouri firefighter Billy Hurt

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Firefighters, friends and loved ones of Billy Hurt took part in a funeral procession for him from The Crossing church in south Columbia to the Boonville area.

Hurt, a retired firefighter, was killed a week ago working safety at a sprint car track.

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Pocatello Police warn ISU students of campus public safety phone scam

Seth Ratliff

POCATELO, Idaho (KIFI) — The Pocatello Police Department is warning Idaho State University students to be on high alert after reports of scammers impersonating campus Public Safety officers.

According to police, the scammer or scammers are calling students by phone, claiming that “evidence” has been found in their vehicle and threatening them with an immediate investigation unless they take swift action. This typically involves a demand for payment or personal information.

“[Remember] scammers often use fear and emotional manipulation to pressure people into acting quickly,” the Pocatello Police Department shared in a public statement. “Law enforcement agencies will not demand immediate action or payment over the phone.”

If you do receive a call like this, police say to hang up immediately. Afterwards, look up the official phone number for ISU Public Safety or the Pocatello Police Department yourself and call them directly to verify if the claim is real.

If you believe you have been targeted by this scam, immediately report it to your local law enforcement agency. For more information, click HERE.

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Butte County inmate back in custody after escape, car chase

Seth Ratliff

UPDATED: Tuesday, March 24, 2026 10:25 AM

ARCO, Idaho (KIFI) — An inmate who escaped from the Butte County Jail and led Idaho State Police Troopers on a car chase Monday morning is back in custody.

According to Sheriff Dave Hansen, around 10:05 a.m. Monday, Jeramie L. Rodriguez escaped the jail through a damaged section of chain-link fencing in the inmate recreation yard. Rodriguez had been arrested just the night before on charges of possessing a stolen vehicle.

“Upon being allowed access to the recreation area the following morning, Rodriguez was able to manipulate a damaged portion of the fencing, which made it possible for him to squeeze through to the outside of the contained yard area,” Sheriff Hansen stated in a news release.

Once outside, Rodriguez allegedly stole a nearby parked vehicle that had been left with the keys inside and fled the area.

The vehicle’s owner quickly reported it stolen, allowing Sheriff’s Deputies to track it using its onboard GPS.

Idaho State Police Troopers and Jefferson County Sheriff’s Deputies found the vehicle along Old Butte Highway near Hamer. They attempted to pull Rodriguez over, but he refused to stop, leading to a short car chase.

The chase came to an end after troopers used a tire deflation device, puncturing two of the vehicle’s tires and forcing it to slow to a crawl and stop near Hamer. Rodriguez was taken into custody without further incident. Additional charges are currently pending.

In the wake of the escape, police emphasize that there is no ongoing threat to

This is a developing story. Local News 8 will provide more updates as we learn additional information.

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