Centralia man pleads guilty to DWI in deadly Osage County crash, gets 120-day treatment program

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Centralia man pleaded guilty to three felonies for a drunken October 2024 crash that killed a man.

Nathan Timpe pleaded guilty on Wednesday to driving while intoxicated that caused the death of another and two counts of DWI causing serious injury.

He was sentenced to 120 days of shock incarceration and can get probation at the end of it. He faces a 10-year prison sentence if he fails to complete the program or violates probation.

Timpe crashed his Jeep Wrangler in 2024 and had a blood alcohol content of .109, court documents in previous reporting say.

Riley Pipes, 19, was not wearing a seatbelt and was thrown from the Jeep. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

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Another effort to force federal immigration partnership on Idaho law enforcement dies in the Senate

Seth Ratliff

BOISE, Idaho (KIFI) — A third attempt to mandate formal partnerships between Idaho law enforcement and federal immigration authorities has died in the Senate Chambers.

On Thursday, April 2, Senator Mark Harris (R-Soda Springs) asked the chamber to reject amendments to Senate Bill 1247. Harris, the bill’s sponsor before it was amended in the House, argued the changes match the language of Senate Bill 1441, violating a Senate rule that prevents bill amendments from including the text from other pending legislation, as reported by the Idaho Capital Sun.

The move effectively killed a controversial effort to revive a failed piece of legislation.

Radiator Capping Explained

The legislation became the center of a hostile debate Wednesday night when Representatives Jordan Redman (R-Coeur d’Alene) and Dale Hawkins (R-Fernwood) introduced amendments to completely rewrite SB 1247, as reported by the Idaho Capital Sun.

RELATED: Idaho House lawmakers do ‘hostile’ takeover of E-Verify bill to mandate 287(g) agreements

The tactic, known as “radiator capping,” essentially treats a bill like a car, where the entire engine is replaced aside from the “radiator cap,”; Or in this case, the bill number. This tactic is often used to bypass the standard committee process and public hearings to force through polarizing legislation.

Reviving a Failed Mandate

The rejected amendments attempted to resurrect House Bill 659, which died in a Senate committee earlier this year. The proposal would have required every Idaho law enforcement agency to enter into 287(g) agreements with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Under these agreements, local officers would be required to participate in:

Jail Enforcement: Screening inmates for immigration status.

Warrant Service: Executing federal administrative warrants.

Task Force Operations: Actively searching for and taking action against undocumented immigrants in the community.

Law Enforcement and Political Pressure

HB 659 was extremely unpopular with Idaho law enforcement. The Idaho Sheriff’s Association has repeatedly argued that resources are already stretched thin and the legislation forces local agencies to join “any future program or successor” created by the federal government. While several Idaho counties have already opted into these programs voluntarily, the ISA stresses that many have chosen not to opt into the program due to the financial and manpower costs involved.

RELATED: Idaho law enforcement continues vocal opposition as ICE legislation heads to State Senate

The push to bring back and pass the bill follows reports of intense pressure from Washington, D.C. On March 17, Stephen Miller, a top immigration advisor for the Trump administration, reportedly contacted Governor Brad Little and legislative leaders to urge action.

RELATED: Idaho Sheriffs slam D.C. pressure to resurrect failed immigration enforcement bill

Local News 8 has reached out to the Governor’s Office to confirm these reports, but has not received word back. However, opponents of the effort have criticized their fellow lawmakers for allegedly caving to pressure from Washington.

Letter distributed by Idaho Senate President Pro Tempore Kelly Anthon (R), Rupert.

‘Frankly, I’m ashamed that our governor and Idaho Legislature leaders are allowing themselves to be influenced by the federal government like that,” Sen. James Ruchti told Local News 8. “We are an independent state, and under the 10th Amendment, we should act as such.”

However, in a letter obtained by Local News 8, White House advisor Alex Meyer also threw his weight behind another effort to bring back the unpopular legislation, Senate Bill 1441. The letter states that the 287(g) program “dramatically expands U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) reach” to keep communities safe.

“The bill establishes full participation in the 287(g) program, empowering state and local law enforcement to enforce some aspects of U.S. federal immigration law,” Meyer wrote.

With SB 1441 sent to the “14th Order,” where it could be amended before moving on to a third reading, and SB 1247 dead in the Chamber, the effort to mandate the partnership with ICE may be stalled for the remainder of the session.

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The numbers are in – Idaho Falls donated over $1.3 million to the Giving Machine!

Kaelyn Blessinger

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho – Light the World Giving Machine presented checks to 8 nonprofits this afternoon in Ammon.

These machines, sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, work as vending machines in reverse, allowing people to donate various items in a simple purchase; Such as meals, clothing, hygiene supplies, school materials, and livestock.

Over 48 days (from November 15th to January 1st), more than 95,000 people visited the machines, and 494,000 items were donated in Idaho Falls.

The total donations raised in Idaho Falls: $1,312,826!

Care USA- $211,156

Right to Play- $233,970

Community Food Basket – $137,700

Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Center – $198,810

Idaho Falls Rescue Mission- $147,075

Friends in Service Here – $40,890

Eastern Idaho Community Action Partnership – 202,225

The Village – $141,000

The total amount for donations across Southeast Idaho was $2,898,639.00!

So many lives could potentially be changed due to the generosity of everyone in Southeast Idaho and these organizations are very grateful for all of the support.

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Scam Alert: Deschutes County warns residents to watch out for official-looking email phishing attempts

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Deschutes County reminded community members Thursday to watch out for email scams that try to steal personal or financial information. Some scams may appear to come from county email accounts and reference real permit numbers or application details.

These messages may request urgent payment, ask for bank account or Social Security numbers, or include suspicious links or attachments.

“Do not click links, open attachments, or share personal information in response to unexpected emails,” the county advised in a news release that continues below.

To stay safe, verify the sender’s email address and be cautious of messages that create a sense of urgency. Official communications from Deschutes County will only come from email addresses ending in @deschutes.org.

For more tips about phishing scams, visit www.cisa.gov/recognize-and-report-phishing.

If you believe you were the victim of a scam, call Deschutes County 911 non-emergency dispatch at 541-693-6911 or visit www.deschutes.org/911 to report a crime online.

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There’s Good News: Bend Police Department and Officer Zachary Childers receive top Oregon DUII enforcement honors

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — The Bend Police Department announced Thursday that it’s been awarded the 2025 Enforcement Agency of the Year by the Oregon DUII Multi-Disciplinary Training Task Force.  

In addition, Bend Police Officer Zachary Childers was named the 2025 DUII Officer of the Year. Officer Childers has been a Bend officer since 2017 and in law enforcement for more than a decade. He currently serves as a DUII/Aggressive Driving Enforcement Officer for the agency. 

The awards were presented at the 2026 Oregon DUII Multi-Disciplinary Conference. Mothers Against Drunk Driving also recognized Officer Childers with the honor of DUII Officer of the Year at the event.

In 2025, Bend Police arrested more than 550 people for DUI – and Officer Childers made 151 of those arrests. 

“His commitment to keeping our roads safe by finding and arresting impaired drivers makes a huge different in our community, and we are proud of his work and his award,” Bend Police Communications Manager Sheila Miller said in a news release that continues below:

DUII enforcement is a primary focus of the Bend Police Department. In addition to enforcement, however, the Department is committed to prevention as well.

In 2025, the department’s traffic team partnered with school resource officers to educate students on traffic safety, with hands-on exercises using goggles and pedal carts that help simulate driving and driving impaired. 

On New Year’s Eve, Bend Police staffed 10 additional patrol officers, focused in the downtown area, to make sure our community knew law enforcement was taking DUIIs seriously. The department also set up an education booth and provided free alcohol breath testing to nearly 200 members of the public. 

Last year, four of the city’s five fatal crashes in Bend involved impairment, Miller said. 

“That’s one of the reasons our department has increased staffing, training and the skillsets of members of our traffic reconstruction team,” she said. “Having an effective reconstruction team allows us to hold impaired drivers accountable when they harm others in the community.” 

Miller said, “The Bend Police Department will continue to prioritize keeping drunk and drug-impaired drivers off our roads. We encourage every member of our community to not get behind the wheel while impaired, so we can all work together to keep our roads safe for all users.” 

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Rolla man accused of ripping woman’s skin from neck

Ryan Shiner

Steven Wolfe

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Phelps County man was arrested and charged after he allegedly yanked off the skin from a woman’s neck on Monday.

Steven Wolfe, 25, of Rolla, was charged on Wednesday in Phelps County with first-degree assault. He is being held at the Phelps County Jail on a $250,000 bond. A court date has not been scheduled.

The probable cause statement says police were called around 6 p.m. Monday for a report of an assault.

The statement says the victim made dinner for Wolfe and another resident and Wolfe became upset because he claimed the macaroni and cheese “belonged to him.”

Wolfe allegedly pulled on the victim’s throat, where she had recently had a new tattoo, and left a deep cut, the statement says. Police wrote when they arrived, there “was a copious amount of blood down the front” of the victim’s chest.

Police described the injury as being 3-inches tall “and stretching the entire length of her throat.”

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Governor Kotek appoints Bend’s Ellen Waterston to a second term as Oregon’s poet laureate

Barney Lerten

SALEM, Ore. (KTVZ) — Governor Tina Kotek has appointed Ellen Waterston of Bend to a second term as Oregon’s poet laureate, Oregon Humanities announced Thursday.

A celebrated poet/writer, educator and speaker who founded the Writing Ranch and the Waterston Desert Writing Prize, Waterston will serve a second two-year term, ending in August 2028. 

Waterston is Oregon’s 11th poet laureate, first appointed to the role in 2024.  

“Ellen has embraced the role, visiting 23 of the state’s 36 counties in the past two years,” Kotek said. “In this time of division, both real and perceived, Ellen has been an effective ambassador in uniting Oregonians and reminding us of what we share. I look forward to seeing her continue to harness her artistry to build a stronger sense of community across Oregon.” 

In less than two years, Waterston has crisscrossed the state to present 84 poetry readings and workshops in 39 Oregon communities.  

“It’s a particular honor to be in this role at this time in our state and nation’s history,” Waterston said. “I’ve come to realize that my job is to showcase poetry in all its forms as a catalyst for mutual understanding.” 

At a recent appearance in Prineville, for example, a participant’s question about whether poetry is supposed to rhyme prompted a discussion about the poetic forms shaped by different cultures and places, including cowboy poetry.

“It developed into the most wonderful, robust conversation about all the different poetry forms, from sonnet to slam,” Waterston said. “It was one more instance of the delightful and unexpected interactions that result while traveling the state in the name of poetry.” 

In her second term, Waterston plans to pursue two complementary projects, in addition to continuing to deliver workshops and presentations.

The first, Poetry in Public Places (abbreviated P!PP), encourages communities in Oregon to display poems in unexpected locations, “from poetry walks to permanent art installations,” she explained. She will explore pathways for poets to engage public art in Oregon and will enlist the involvement of public and private construction and remodeling projects to do the same.

In the second project, she will share the podium wherever she goes with a young poet from that community. Writings from those poets will be included in an anthology of young Oregon poets, with the working title Meet Me on the Divide.

Waterston said, “The poems in this anthology will form a daisy chain north to south, and up and over the Cascades.”  

In April, which is National Poetry Month, Waterston is scheduled to appear at the Hood River Library on April 4; at Coos Bay Library on April 9; at Larkspur Community Center in Bend on April 21; at Rogue Writers Collective in Grants Pass on April 25; and at Western Oregon University in Monmouth on April 30.  

Later this year, Waterston will deliver a poem commissioned for the 100th anniversary of the Astoria Column in July, and in August will help welcome U.S. Poet Laureate Arthur Sze for the opening of the Deschutes Public Library’s new Central Library.

For a complete schedule of Waterston’s upcoming appearances, visit writingranch.com or oregonhumanities.org/events

“It is truly an honor to meet with people all over the state,” Waterston said. “I am so very grateful to Governor Kotek for the opportunity to continue to share my love of poetry and place with Oregonians for a second term.” 

Much of Waterston’s award-winning poetry and prose is inspired by the remote reaches of southeastern Oregon’s outback.

Her five poetry titles include the just-released As Far as I Can Anthem, featuring poems largely written during her first term as Poet Laureate.

Others are I Am Madagascar, Between Desert Seasons, Vía Lactéa and Hotel Domilocos. Waterston is also the author of four literary nonfiction titles: her most recent are We Could Die Doing This: Dispatches on Ageing from Oregon’s Outback and Walking the High Desert: Encounters with Rural America Along the Oregon Desert Trail.  

In addition to her work as an author, Waterston founded the for-profit Writing Ranch, which offers retreats and workshops for established and emerging writers, and the Bend-based literary arts nonprofit The Nature of Words, which she directed for over a decade.

She subsequently founded the Waterston Desert Writing Prize, annually recognizing a nonfiction book proposal that examines the role of deserts in the human narrative, now a program of the High Desert Museum.

She also has taught creative writing at middle through graduate school levels and authored the original feasibility study for the OSU-Cascades Low Residency MFA in Creative Writing. 

Her work as an author and literary arts advocate was earlier recognized with an honorary Ph.D. in humane letters from OSU-Cascades and, in 2024, with both Literary Arts’ Stewart H. Holbrook Award at the Oregon Book Awards and Soapstone’s Bread and Roses Award.

“We celebrate Ellen Waterston for her work creating a vibrant literary life east of the Cascades,” wrote Soapstone. “She created unique and important events; focused attention on the literature of the High Desert, mentored numerous writers, while writing poetry and nonfiction works that have become an essential part of the literature of Oregon and the West.” 

Waterston received her BA from Harvard University and MA in archaeology from the University of Madagascar. She has three children and three grandchildren and resides in Bend.   

The Oregon Poet Laureate fosters the art of poetry, encourages literacy and learning, addresses central issues relating to humanities and heritage, and reflects on public life in Oregon. The program is funded by the Oregon Cultural Trust. 

Past Oregon Poets Laureate are: Edwin Charles Markham (1921-1940); Ben Hur Lampman (1951-1954); Ethel Romig Fuller (1957-1965); William Stafford (1974-1989); Lawson Inada (2006-2010); Paulann Petersen (2010-2014); Peter Sears (2014-2016); Elizabeth Woody (2016-2018); Kim Stafford (2018-2020); and Anis Mojgani (2020-2024). 

Waterston will begin her second term this August. To learn more about the Oregon Poet Laureate program, visit the Poet Laureate website.  

_________________ 

About the Oregon Cultural Trust 

Created in 2001 by the Oregon Legislature, the Oregon Cultural Trust serves as an ongoing funding engine for arts, heritage, and humanities. Funding comes through the Cultural Tax Credit, which empowers Oregonians to direct a portion of their state taxes to supporting cultural opportunities. Fifty-eight percent of donations go directly to grants for 45 County and Tribal Coalitions and qualified nonprofits, while 42 percent helps grow a permanent endowment. 

The Cultural Trust is part of Business Oregon in recognition of the vital role the arts, heritage and humanities play in supporting the economies, educational opportunities and vibrancy of communities throughout the state. Learn more at CulturalTrust.org and follow us on Facebook and Instagram

About Oregon Humanities 

Oregon Humanities is an independent, nonprofit affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities and a partner of the Oregon Cultural Trust. Through its programs and publications—which include the Conversation Project, Consider This, Oregon Humanities magazine, the podcasts This Place and The Detour and grants that support public humanities programing across the state —Oregon Humanities connects Oregonians to ideas that change lives and transform communities. More information at oregonhumanities.org.  

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Columbia parking manager arrested after allegedly stealing coins from meters, exchanging it for paper money

Ryan Shiner

Editor’s note: Faup’s age was corrected. A source’s error initially listed a different age.

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Columbia city employee has been accused of stealing, according to a Thursday press release from the Columbia Police Department.

City Parking Manager James Faup, 38, was arrested Thursday morning on suspicion of felony stealing and misdemeanor stealing, according to the release. Faup appeared on the Boone County Jail’s online roster on Thursday afternoon. Information on the jail’s website say he was released on bond. Charges have not yet appeared on Casenet.

The release says CPD received a tip on Tuesday about someone wearing a Public Works uniform “who was exchanging a large amount of coins at a local business.”

Faup allegedly took coins from parking meters and exchanged them for paper money “for personal use,” the release says. Police wrote that Faup is no longer employed with the city, though he still appears on the city’s website.

A Public Works spokesman said the could not comment on an active investigation.

Check back for updates.

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Blair Oaks bus driver accused of assaulting student, Cole County Sheriff’s Office says

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Cole County Sheriff’s Office wrote in a Thursday press release that a bus driver was accused of assaulting a student on a bus on Wednesday morning.

The release says a Blair Oaks school resource officer was called by the district’s superintendent “in reference to an alleged assault that occurred on a school bus. The assault was allegedly committed on a bus, by a bus driver, against a juvenile student.”

The bus driver was not named, though the sheriff’s office said in the release that they are accused of fourth-degree assault.

The district had no comment on the matter on Thursday. Superintendent Ben Meldrum said the district uses Durham Transportation Services for its bus services. ABC 17 News has reached out to Cole County Prosecutor Locke Thompson.

A spokesperson with the bus company told ABC 17 News in an email that the driver was put on leave before being fired.

“We can confirm that we received a report regarding an incident involving our driver and a student and are cooperating fully with law enforcement on their investigation,” Summit School Services spokeswoman Anna Lam wrote. “We take the safety of our students very seriously, and upon learning of the incident, placed the driver on administrative leave and then terminated the employment of the driver.”

Check back for updates.

Press Release 4-2-26 -Fourth Degree AssaultDownload

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Santa Barbara’s Karpeles Museum Takes its Treasures Global

Patricia Martellotti

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – For decades, visitors have walked through a Santa Barbara museum to experience history up close. Now, the Karpeles Manuscript Library Museum is entering a new chapter—one that’s prompting reflection across the community as it prepares to leave its longtime home.

Inside the museum, moments that shaped the world feel almost within reach. From fragments of the Declaration of Independence to relics tied to Apollo missions, the collection offers a rare, intimate look at history—often just inches away from visitors.

“It’s the world’s largest privately owned significant manuscript collection,” said Director Norman Cohan.

For more than 40 years, the museum has welcomed the public free of charge, drawing visitors from across the country. Many describe the experience as both powerful and inspiring.

“I come from Fairfax, Virginia and this is just incredible to see all these historic pieces here,” said visitor Laurie Sullivan.

But that experience is about to change.

The Santa Barbara location will close its physical doors on April 5, as thousands of manuscripts are relocated to Florida. Some materials will also be digitized, allowing broader global access.

Local leaders say the loss will be felt.

“Artifacts from ancient Egypt… just a lot of stuff that you wouldn’t see anywhere else, and it makes me sad that they’re moving,” said Santa Barbara City Councilmember Oscar Gutierrez.

As the final days approach, visitors are being encouraged to take one last look before the transition.

“I hope people will come out and learn from the artifacts while they still can,” Gutierrez added.

While the building may soon go quiet, museum leaders say its mission will continue—reaching new audiences beyond Santa Barbara.

“Perhaps this can further the cause of enlightening humanity,” Cohan said.

The museum’s physical chapter in Santa Barbara is ending—but its history, and its impact, are far from over.

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