Hawthorne Middle School closed Thursday due to plumbing issue

Seth Ratliff

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) — There will be no classes at Hawthorne Middle School in Pocatello tomorrow, Thursday, April 23, due to an unexpected plumbing issue.

Pocatello/Chubbuck School District 25 is working to address the issue and anticipates classes will resume as scheduled on Friday, April 24.

District leaders say all after-school activities, including track practice, are canceled Wednesday and Thursday, due to the issue. All activities are expected to resume Friday.

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Columbia doctor accused of misconduct now charged in federal court

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Columbia doctor who was accused of sexual misconduct last fall has been charged in federal court.

Dr. Jonathan Morris, who owns Columbia Urgent Care on North Providence Road, is charged with 15 counts of illegally prescribing drugs and 23 counts of health care fraud. He was indicted on April 8 and was arrested on Wednesday, according to the Department of Justice. The jail he is being held at was not immediately released by authorities.

A Wednesday press release from the Department of Justice alleges Morris, 46, defrauded Medicare and Medicaid by causing them to “be billed for medical services as if they had been provided by him instead of the assistant physicians” he employs. APs are medical school students who have not entered a residency program yet, according to the release.

The release and bond memo also accuse Morris of giving prescription drugs to friends and “people suffering from substance use disorders and those with whom he had sexual relationships.”

Investigators are “are currently aware of about 20 individuals who received prescriptions for a total of over 15,000 individual dosage units of controlled substances from Morris despite the existence of substance use issues, sexual relations with Morris, or both.,” the release says.

The bond memo also makes several references to text messages he sent to alleged witnesses that he propositioned drugs and sexual favors; as well as several allegations of sexual assault, some of which were outlined in a previous Boone County discrimination case.

The bond memo says Morris “failed to properly train his APs essentially rendering the clinic a free-for-all when it comes to issuing prescriptions for controlled substances.”

ABC 17 News has reached out to the Department of Justice.

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Fall River Electric responding to widespread outage in Rexburg area

Seth Ratliff

REXBURG, Idaho (KIFI) — Fall River Electric Cooperative crews are responding to a widespread power outage affecting almost 1,000 customers in the Rexburg area Wednesday afternoon.

According to updates from the utility provider’s Facebook page, the outage is impacting residents in the Burton, Hibbard, Archer, & Salem areas. While the specific cause of the outage remains under investigation, Fall River Electric confirmed that repair teams are “en route to restore power as quickly and safely as possible.”

Fall River Electric anticipates that service should be fully restored within two hours or by about 5 pm. For more information or to monitor the outage, click HERE.

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Vehicle, Columbia school bus collide on Interstate 70; no students on board

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A vehicle and a Columbia Public Schools bus collided on Interstate 70 eastbound east of St. Charles Road on Wednesday.

CPS spokeswoman Michelle Baumstark said no students were on the bus.

Boone County dispatchers sent out a public alert saying the road was likely blocked.

Columbia Police are working the crash scene.

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Pocatello Man Sentenced to 11 Years in Federal Prison for Child Pornography

Seth Ratliff

POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI) — A 34-year-old Pocatello man faces up to over a decade in federal prison for receiving child pornography following a joint undercover operation between the FBI and Idaho Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force.

U.S. District Judge David C. Nye sentenced Clint Lusk to 135 months in federal prison to be served consecutively to any future sentence stemming from pending state charges. In addition to his prison time, Lusk must pay $45,000 in restitution, serve 15 years of supervised release, and register as a sex offender.

The Investigation and Arrest

The case stems from a joint investigation by the FBI and the Idaho Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force into child enticement on the Whisper messaging app. According to court records, in November 2024, Lusk used the app to contact an undercover investigator posing as a 13-year-old girl.

Prosecutors say Lusk, identifying himself as a man in his early thirties, quickly steered the conversation in a sexual direction and proposed they meet up.

Authorities arranged a meeting at the Red Lion Hotel in Pocatello, where they identified and arrested Lusk upon his arrival.

Following his arrest, a search of Lusk’s home and phone uncovered a cache of more than 52,000 images containing child pornography.

The search also unveiled several videos of voyeurism involving known adult victims, for which Lusk has been charged separately.

Additional Charges

During the search, investigators also discovered several voyeurism videos involving known adult victims. Lusk faces separate charges for these discoveries in Bannock County District Court, where he is currently awaiting sentencing.

Lusk pleaded guilty to receiving child pornography on October 21, 2025.

U.S. Attorney Bart M. Davis commended the collaborative efforts of the FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, the ICAC Task Force, and the Pocatello Police Department with the arrest and investigation.

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Expert thinks advancements in DNA technology could provide a new perspective on 2009 Columbia cold case

Olivia Hayes

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

On a chilly January day in 2009, a hiker found skeletal remains at a homeless encampment near a trailway behind the Conley Road Walmart in Columbia.

Officers began their investigation on Jan. 7. By April 20, with the help of forensic anthropology experts from the University of Missouri, police were able to give those human remains an identity and a cause of death.

Investigators determined that 49-year-old Mark Dailey was killed by blunt force trauma to the head and sharp force trauma to the neck.

Seventeen years after the harrowing discovery, one of the forensic experts who helped identify Dailey’s remains in 2009 says that re-examining the remains could be worth the extra time and manpower for law enforcement, given years of technological advancements.

“There’s always an opportunity to revisit cold cases like this and see if there are any new findings that can be found,” said Mark Beary, who now works at MU’s Research Reactor, but was formally a consulting forensic anthropologist with the Boone and Callaway County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Most recently, in March, Columbia Police identified human remains found in 2025 at Rock Forks Lake Conservation Area as Daniel Thompson, who they say was reported missing in 2023.

Beary explained that in cases like Dailey’s or Thompson’s, forensic anthropologists are called in for assistance by the medical examiner’s office because normal methods of forensic pathology or autopsy are not applicable to human remains in advanced stages of decomposition or skeletonized.

“A forensic anthropology analysis typically provides a biological profile of the decedent based on their skeletal remains, and those aspects generally include an estimation of the victim’s age, their biological sex, their stature, and their ancestral affiliation,” Beary said.

Along with the biological profile, Beary said an anthropologist can also help identify any trauma to the bones.

“If there’s trauma present, those findings are ultimately then used by the medical examiner to make a ruling as to whether a case is a homicide, or some other motor manner of death,” Beary said.

Beary said Dailey had blunt force trauma to the head or face and sharp force trauma to the bones in his neck.

Beary said that in some cases, law enforcement will also take forensic experts back to the scene, as was done in Dailey’s case.

“With the location where the remains were recovered at that particular time in 2009, a homeless encampment, there was sort of a structure there in which the remains were recovered,” Beary said.

He said his examination also found that Dailey’s remains had been at the homeless encampment where he was found since at least the fall of 2008, but possibly up to one year in advance.

Beary said reexamining the remains could be worth the extra time and manpower for law enforcement, given years of technological advancements.

“There’s always an opportunity to revisit cold cases like this and see if there are any new findings that can be found,” Beary said.

Gremore wouldn’t say what clothes or personal items police collected from the scene. Beary said Dailey’s trauma to his neck was consistent with a knife that officers recovered from the scene during their initial investigation. Gremore said police have never been able to confirm if that knife was used to harm or kill Dailey.

“There was a weapon to the neck, but unknown what,” Gremore said. “You can look at the autopsy, and you can tell something very violent happened.”

Gremore said a number of challenges have come with Dailey’s case, like the time needed to identify his remains.

“The faster we work whenever someone’s deceased, the better chances are for us to find out what happened,” Gremore said. “When you have months go by before you’re able to get that information, it’s just going to hurt you.”

According to Gremore, hundreds of people have been interviewed in the investigation over the last 17 years, but there are still more questions than answers. He said Dailey’s unstable housing status also created some hurdles.

“Knowing who friends are, last time someone had conversations with them, that makes it a little bit more difficult,” Gremore said. “But that doesn’t change the fact of how hard we should work into that. There’s still a human life, it’s the opportunity to find those answers that make that more difficult.”

Gremore and Beary both said that due to Dailey’s level of decomposition, it’s also hard to pinpoint when he died, creating a vague timeline to work with.

“This was January. Depending on how hot it was, how much weather there had been as far as precipitation, things like that change the rate of decomp,” Gremore said. “You could guess well over a month or three weeks at minimum.”

Beary said his examination found that Dailey’s remains had been at the homeless encampment where he was found since at least fall 2008, but possibly up to one year in advance.

Harbour House Lead Case Manager Tambra Hickem said that after Dailey’s murder, more effort was put into place to better support and keep track of the unhoused.

“A team of mental health people who go out into the community and they actually go out and check on the homelessness unsheltered,” Hickem said. “Because before something would happen, you wouldn’t know about it forever.”

Police ask anyone who may know what happened to Mark Dailey or who may have killed him to contact them.

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Kansas City Royals announce move to Crown Center

Collin Anderson

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Royals are moving back to the inner city.

On Wednesday, the team announced that it had partnered with Hallmark cards to bring a “world-class” ballpark and mixed-use developments to Crown Center.

“Today is a narrative of community, of trust, of courage and vision, and a passion for doing something special for the city we love,” said Royals CEO and Chairman John Sherman. “Together, we will rethink, reimagine, redefine, and redevelop Crown Center into an 85-acre-plus setting here that will instantly become the largest sports anchor downtown development of its kind.”

The new development is expected to cost approximately $2 billion and will be the largest public-private investment in the city’s history. The project will be funded mostly by the Royals as well as several other private investors. Funding will also be supplemented by the city courtesy of Missouri’s Show-Me Sports Investment Act.

The city expects to break ground on the new district in 2027, and will create more than 20,000 jobs in the construction phase alone.

“For over 50 years, Crown Center and the Kansas City Royals have created memories that last a lifetime for the people of our region,” said Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas. “The public-private partnership between Hallmark, the Royals, Kansas City and our state ensures we connect our neighborhoods, keeps our downtown vibrant and maintains big league baseball in our city for generations to come.”

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Local Robotics Team Wins Big, Now Asking for Community’s Help

Allison Winslow

SANTA BARBARA COUNTY, Calif. (KEYT) – A local robotics team, “Team Octobots” – comprised of Santa Barbara County high school students – took home second place at the FIRST Robotics Southern California State Championship in Anaheim earlier this month.

Over 30 high school students battled their way to the finals, beating out higher seated teams. They lost only to the third globally ranked “Team High Tide.”

In a press release, team captain and Dos Pueblos High School senior, Zeo Pereira, shared what this win means to him.

“That moment meant a lot to me, especially after a season of early mornings on school nights, up until 3:00am at robotics, and then back to school at 9:00am for several days at a time. It was a big mental battle. I’m proud of the growth our team has shown.”

Now, the team is turning its sights to the FIRST Robotics World Championship in Houston, Texas, set for April 28-May 2. The call has gone out for community help in getting all team members to the competition. The team hopes to raise $50,000 dollars to cover the travel costs.

If you would like to support the team, visit their Give Butter page to make a donation.

The Latest Breaking News, Weather Alerts, Sports and More Anytime On Our Mobile Apps. Keep Up With the Latest Articles by Signing Up for the News Channel 3-12 Newsletter.

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Homeowner surprised by swarm of 30,000 bees

CNN Newsource

Originally Published: 22 APR 26 15:31 ET

By Andrew Adams, KSL

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    KAYSVILLE, Utah (KSL) — It was an unlikely problem that showed up out of the blue Monday, just outside Jeannette Stokes Memmott’s front door.

Bees.

And just not a few. There were thousands.

“It was quite the sight,” she said. “I thought, ‘What do we do, what do we do, what do we do, who do we call, who do we call?'”

Though she initially feared they were yellow jackets, Memmott soon discovered they were honey bees.

“We thought, ‘No, no, no, no, no — we can’t spray the honeybees,” she said.

Instead, they reached out to the Davis County Beekeepers Association. It turned out one of its beekeepers was a neighbor.

“I would probably say we had around 30,000 bees on the column,” said the beekeeper, Shane Hughes.

Hughes carefully extracted the bees from the column and transferred them into a bee box, although he acknowledged there were still some bees left inside, including possibly the queen.

Swarming, he explained, is a natural part of bee reproduction this time of year, although sometimes it can prove to be a little unpredictable.

“What swarming does (is) if you have a really healthy and vigorous hive, naturally, the bees want to split and make two really strong hives, and it’s just a way for them to reproduce,” Hughes explained. “The queen will hatch and take about half of that hive somewhere else, and we never know where it’s going to go.”

Memmott said she believed it was possible the bees may have come from another neighbor’s home.

“For whatever reason, the hive split, and here they landed right on my very home,” Memmott said.

Hughes said on Sunday he was helping a different homeowner with a similar issue.

“It’s really hard to find the queen,” he said. “Last night, I was in Farmington and had to start tearing off siding of a home and reaching in 2 or 3 feet and trying to pull out every single bee from inside their home.”

Hughes said he believes Memmott’s bees were Italian, and planned to bring them back to his home. He said those types of bees can produce 80 to 100 pounds of honey per hive.

He said there are beekeeping groups in various counties that can help to mitigate these issues, and people in Davis County who encounter swarms can report them to Brent Rasmussen with the Davis County Beekeepers Association at 801-390-0222.

“Shane came to the rescue,” Memmott said of her beekeeper neighbor. “It’s fascinating, but I don’t want them to live in my home, because I’m told if they get in your attic, you’re looking at some trouble.”

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.

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New tool helps visualize water use — and what’s not reaching the Great Salt Lake

Fox13

Originally Published: 22 APR 26 16:04 ET

By Nate Larsen

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    SALT LAKE CITY (KSTU) — If you haven’t been to the Great Salt Lake lately, the impact is hard to miss. Lower water levels, an expanding shoreline, and ongoing concerns about the lake’s future are all on display. Now, Salt Lake County leaders are hoping a new visualization tool will help people better understand why — and what can be done about it.

Inside the Salt Lake County Government Center, a new display uses blue marbles to represent water. Each marble equals about 10,000 acre-feet, giving a visual breakdown of where water goes across the Great Salt Lake Basin, and how much of it never makes it back to the lake.

“We believe that the more people know and understand how water works in the Great Salt Lake Basin, the better we’re going to be able to figure out how do we manage our water so that we can have a healthy lake,” said Jason Brown, CEO of Envision Utah.

The display highlights a key takeaway: most water use happens outdoors.

In Salt Lake County, about 70% of water is used outside — primarily for things like lawn watering. Of that, roughly 90% is lost to evaporation and does not return to the system. Indoor water use, by comparison, is much smaller, and most of it eventually flows back into the ecosystem.

“We lose about 100 times more water outdoors than what we lose in the water we use inside,” Brown said. “The water that goes on your lawn doesn’t.”

County leaders say they are working to reduce that impact — starting with their own operations. Emily Paskett, sustainability director for Salt Lake County, says efforts include upgrading irrigation systems, fixing leaks quickly, and watering at more efficient times of day. The county is also replacing traditional grass with drought-tolerant landscaping at many of its more than 140 facilities and parks. So far, Salt Lake County has removed more than 160,000 square feet of turf, saving millions of gallons of water each year. Officials say the goal is not just to reduce government water use, but to set an example for residents across the Wasatch Front.

“So that everybody can do just a little bit to conserve a lot of water,” Paskett said.

With a record low snowpack this year, leaders say those small changes could make a meaningful difference in helping more water reach the Great Salt Lake.

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.

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