Local church celebrates 125 years with performance on Colorado’s largest theater organ

Bradley Davis

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – The Immanuel Lutheran Church in Colorado Springs started its service in 1901 in German. 125 years later, the language has changed, but the congregation’s love for music has not waned.

“We’ve literally gone from steam locomotive to putting people on the moon,” council president Karl Fruendt said.

The church celebrates its 125th birthday on Sunday, half the age of the United States of America. It will host a hymn festival at 2 p.m. with six different Lutheran churches from around town, led by guest organist Benjamin Kolodziej, traveling from Dallas.

“He’s going to literally pull out all the stops on our church organ,” Fruendt said.

At 4 p.m., the church is partying like it’s 1925. Immanuel Lutheran will screen the 1925 silent film “Seven Chances” while Kolodziej plays the accompaniment music on Colorado’s largest theater organ.

The hymn is in the main church, while the silent film and Colorado’s largest organ are in their gym next door.

Click here to follow the original article.

The School Buzz: Widefield teacher becomes published author

Josh Helmuth

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — A Widefield English teacher is now a published author. It’s a dream come true.

The dream — and the book — comes from Stephanie Owen, an English teacher at Widefield High School. On top of being a rock star teacher, she’s now a children’s book author.

The book is called The Lonely Lighthouse: The Story of Little Sable Point Lighthouse. It’s about a real-life lighthouse in Michigan, in a town where her family went every summer. She grew up going to it. She’s fascinated by it. It’s historic. She fell in love with the story behind it. And she wanted to put it on paper. 

She said she’s dreamed of being an author since the 2nd grade.

“I remember writing stories and publishing them in the little school magazines that they had. And I remember the very first book I ever wrote,” said Owen. “I had illustrations about two best friends and their pet bird,” she laughed.

Owen has a Master’s in creative writing and literature. She started this book in 2020, got a mentorship with a published author to help her polish it a year later, and then she got an agent. Finally came the book deal in 2023. And it’s just now coming out.

The book is for ages three to eight. You can check it out at https://stephanieowenbooks.com/

Do you know someone cool at your school? Email Josh! SchoolBuzz@KRDO.com. 

Click here to follow the original article.

3-year-old girl reunited with beloved stuffed animal lost at Boston Marathon

By Brandon Truitt

Click here for updates on this story

    BOSTON (WBZ) — A mother and her three-year-old daughter were among the thousands cheering for the Boston Marathon runners on Boylston Street on Monday, but a beloved stuffed animal was lost in the crowd.

Katie Pedrick and her daughter Daisy looked around the area for hours, retracing their steps in the hope of finding the stuffed toy, but no luck. Pedrick, fearing the worst, turned to social media for help.

“My three-year-old lost her favorite stuffy at the Boston Marathon today,” Pedrick said in the post. “Her name is Sarah and we would really, really love her back.”

The video quickly gained thousands of views, but no one had seen any sign of the stuffed animal. Pedrick then called CBS News Boston, hoping someone knew someone who may be around the finish line late at night. CBS News Boston called Ali Foley, a volunteer with the Neighborhood Association of Back Bay. Foley quickly set out with her dog, combining sidewalks, trash containers, and even speaking with a Boston police officer.

But right as Foley was about to give up, something caught her eye, lying against a building.

“I looked down Exeter Street, which had just been cleaned,” Foley said. “I looked down to the left and I see a little bundle of fur on the sidewalk and I said, ‘That can’t be it.'”

Daisy was reunited with her beloved Sarah near the finish line on Tuesday.

“I didn’t think we would ever see her again and we are so happy to have her back. She is going to get an AirTag collar the second we get home, that’s for sure,” Pedrick said. “I think the Boston Marathon is so much about people coming together and community spirit. It really feels like an example of that.”

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.

California State Prison inmates raise service dogs as part of rehabilitation program

By Max Darrow

Click here for updates on this story

    STOCKTON, California (KPIX) — The California Health Care Facility (CHCF), a state prison in Stockton, is among the numerous California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) facilities that are leaning into the rehabilitative component of incarceration, so once people are out of prison, they stay out.

One of those efforts at CHCF is the BARK Program, where certain incarcerated individuals get a chance to raise future service dogs for people with disabilities, in partnership with the organization Canine Companions.

“Incarcerated persons who are interested in raising a service dog have to go through a huge vetting process that we have here,” said Jasmin Gin, Community Resources Manager. “Rehabilitation is a huge thing for CDCR. We want to make sure they’re super serious about giving back to the community. They do that by raising the service dogs that we have here.”

Canine Companions’ service dogs change the lives of people with disabilities on a daily basis. Organization leaders say this program takes it a step further, as it helps the inmates with rehabilitation.

“Every incarcerated person who’s been through this program has paroled, and none of them have come back,” Gin said. “The dog itself doesn’t care what the person does. They just have all this love for someone. Some of these guys have never had love their whole lives.”

Isaac Sinsun is an inmate at CHCF, who is 10 years into a 25-to-life sentence for murder. He won’t be eligible for parole for almost seven years.

“This is an opportunity for me to give back to the community that I took from,” he said. “I was out there terrorizing my community. I was taking. I was selfish. I was greedy. I couldn’t see past my own selfish needs. This opportunity allows me to give back to my community and be selfless for once.”

About 96% of incarcerated individuals will one day return to their communities, according to data from the Prison Policy Initiative.

Sinsun said there is nothing that can change the past. But this program allows him to contribute to society in a positive way, providing something good for humans he’ll likely never meet.

“We’ve made horrible mistakes. But we’re redeemable. There are people here in prison who are genuinely remorseful for what they did,” he said. “I lost myself. I really lost myself to my gang lifestyle, to my criminal thinking. When I started to be able to understand that I could actually, give back and be selfless, I found myself again. I found my humanity. I understood what compassion, empathy, responsibility, accountability, really meant.”

Sinsun and his fellow puppy raisers, there are nine in total, take a lot of pride in their job to get these dogs prepared to be service animals.

“We actually get to give back,” he said. “We get to give our time to help somebody else in need for the rest of their life.”

Canine Companions places the service dogs with people with disabilities free of charge, and they will follow up with them for life.

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.

Pet owner looking for her lost dog targeted by scammers using AI

By Kara St. Cyr

Click here for updates on this story

    OAKLAND, California (KPIX) — Alisa Harrell hasn’t seen her 1-year-old French bulldog, Dash, in four months, and she is now warning that people should be wary of scammers who are trying to take advantage of people looking for their lost pets

“I was walking my garbage out to the curb, and he went to use the restroom. And then after he just dashed off. His name is Dash for a reason, so he dashed,” Harrell said.

Harrell searched far and wide with no luck. She turned to the Internet for help, posting pictures and details about Dash’s disappearance on several apps to no avail.

“I posted PawBoost, LOVE Pet, their apps, Harrell said. “I reported to the SPCAs in the Bay Area.”

After months of failed search efforts and unanswered posts, she finally got a lead: a text message from an anonymous person claiming they had Dash.

But there was a catch.

“They wanted money. I said, ‘I don’t have a problem giving you the $300.’ And they were like, ‘Well, can you send $150 via Zelle or Cash App or something?’ and I’m like, ‘No, I want my dog,'” Harrell said. “Then, they just kind of basically went ghost on me,” Harrell said.

Harrell told CBS News Bay Area she’d pay the money for her dog’s safe return if the texts were real. But small details weren’t right. People using Nextdoor agreed.

“People were responding, kind of trended on Nextdoor. And then this one girl said, ‘You know, that could be AI-generated,” Harrell said.

For starters, the picture they sent of Dash featured decor eerily similar to the original photo Harrell had posted months earlier. Not to mention there was a dead giveaway in the corner of the photo.

“If you look at the picture, yeah, right here,” Harrell said. “If you look in the picture, there’s the AI diamond right there.”

AI scams like this one are on the rise. The FBI’s 2025 Internet crime report showed 22 thousand reports — All AI-related. Ones like these are classified as confidence or romance scams because they prey on the emotions of others.

“We love our pets. We’ll do anything for them. You know, I would have given the $300 for my dog,” Harrel said. “So, you know, just saddens me that that’s where we are today with AI.”

While Harrell didn’t fall for this scam. She wants her story to be a lesson for others.

“I’m just glad that I wasn’t a victim of it,” Harell said.

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.

4-year-old boy sworn in as honorary Colton Police Department officer

By Lesley Marin

Click here for updates on this story

    COLTON, California (KCAL, KCBS) — A 4-year-old boy was honored with the ultimate recognition from the Colton Police Department on Tuesday night, when he was sworn in as an honorary officer.

Ezra Galicia’s obsession with police officers was highlighted earlier this year, when his aunt called the police department dispatch line to see if some officers could stop by for his birthday party.

After that, and seeing the passion that Ezra has for his local law enforcement, the department decided to take their partnership a step further. Instead of taking a traditional oath to serve, Ezra’s oath included promises to do good and listen to his mom, dad and aunt.

He was gifted a custom Colton Police uniform and given his very own badge during the swearing-in ceremony.

“I feel like, you know, his dreams came true,” said Ezra’s aunt, Elyssa Shaw. “I am not gonna hear the end of it, and I hope I don’t because this is the coolest thing ever.”

Since showing up for Ezra’s birthday, the video posted on the Colton Police Department Instagram page has been viewed more than 10 million times, creating a busy couple of weeks for the 4-year-old.

Colton Police Chief Anthony Vega says that the event has, in turn, motivated his own officers, many of whom were honored at the same ceremony for their community involvement.

“He is so loyal and committed to Colton Police Department that his aunt said I gotta make the call,” Vega said. “Once we put that together, we were all just hooked. He motivated and inspired us.”

Ezra’s parents say that he’s taking everything that’s happened very seriously.

“You can see the proudness in him,” Ezra’s mother, Salina Galicia, said. “It’s just been a blessing, honestly, to see my son shine through this.”

“Confidence, like, ‘I’m a real officer now,'” his father, Luis Galicia, said.

Before he left, Ezra was treated to one last right as a rookie officer — a trip in a CPD patrol car.

Vega said that while this isn’t the first time that the department has done something like this for the community, it certainly won’t be the last, as it helps his officers build a relationship with the people they serve.

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.

Board game maker files claim as tariff refunds open nationwide

By Steve Large

Click here for updates on this story

    SACRAMENTO, California (KOVR) — A new federal portal is now live allowing U.S. businesses to reclaim billions of dollars in tariffs after a Supreme Court ruling found the levies President Trump imposed last year are illegal.

The U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency recently launched the Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) portal, giving importers a formal pathway to request refunds for certain tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. But the money won’t come automatically — businesses must apply and wait for approval.

Price Johnson, chief financial officer of game-maker Cephalofair, is among those now filing claims. He showed a stack of receipts documenting the tariff charges his company paid over the past year.

“We’ve got our summary report here,” Johnson said. “You can see all the imports we made over the course of a year, totalling about $140,000. It’s a lot of money. We’d love to have it back and go to more products.”

Over the past year, Johnson said the tariffs forced difficult decisions.

“We’ve had several different furloughs in place part-time, had to eliminate a full-time position,” he said.

Now, Johnson is submitting his claim through the new portal, hoping to recover those losses.

“At this point, we wait to see how long that takes them to process and to validate,” he said.

CBS News Sacramento first visited Johnson in Rocklin last year when his gaming company was in a real-life battle for survival, with products stuck in a Shanghai warehouse as tariffs on Chinese imports climbed as high as 145%, making shipping financially impossible.

“What we’re going to get back does not offset the damages and the delays that have been imposed,” Johnson said.

Experts say while the portal is a major step forward, it places the burden squarely on businesses to file accurate claims, and not all tariffs may qualify for refunds. Only unliquidated tariffs or those finalized within a limited timeframe are currently eligible.

Still, for companies like Johnson’s, the shift offers some relief.

“It’s certainly a feeling of validation,” he said.

Customs officials say once they approve the claims, businesses will be paid within 60 to 90 days. So Johnson could see his check sometime this summer.

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.

Celeste Rivas Hernandez’s family speaks out after D4vd was charged in her death: “All we want is justice”

By Dean Fioresi

Click here for updates on this story

    LOS ANGELES (KCAL, KCBS) — The family of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez shared their first public statement on Tuesday, a day after singer and songwriter D4vd was charged with murder in their daughter’s death.

“We would like to thank the Los Angeles Police Department and the District Attorney’s Office for their hard work. We would like to thank the people of Lake Elsinore for all their support,” the statement said, in part. “Celeste was a beautiful, strong girl who loved to sing and dance. Every Friday night was movie night and we spent wonderful times together. We love her very much and she always told us that she loved us. We miss her deeply.”

“All we want is Justice for Celeste,” the statement said.

D4vd, whose real name is David Anthony Burke, was charged with first-degree murder with special circumstances, lewd and lascivious acts with an individual under 14 and mutilating a body on Monday morning after he was arrested last week after becoming the target of a grand jury investigation. The murder charges also include special circumstances like lying in wait, committing the crime for financial gain and murdering the witness in an investigation, as well as special circumstances allegations that Burke personally used a sharp instrument to commit the crime in April 2025.

During a press conference on Monday, Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman announced the charges and said that Burke’s murder charge could carry the maximum sentence of life without the possibility of parole or the death penalty.

Hochman alleged that 14-year-old Rivas Hernandez was killed after she threatened to expose Burke’s criminal conduct, including the “repeated lewd and lascivious sexual relations” that he had with her as a child under 14 years old. Charging documents allege that Burke committed the crime of “continuous sexual abuse” beginning on or about Sept. 2023, when Rivas Hernandez had just turned 13.

Rivas’ remains were discovered in the trunk of a Tesla at a Hollywood tow yard in Sept. 2025. The vehicle, which is registered to Burke, had a foul smell that caused employees to alert police. Court records show that the body was “severely decomposed” and “dismembered.” Hochman said on Monday that her body was stuffed into two bags and left to decompose for four months before it was found.

The teen was reported missing from Lake Elsinore in April 2024, a year before she was allegedly killed, according to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office. Los Angeles police said that she was at Burke’s home in the Hollywood Hills as late as April 23, 2025 at the singer’s invitation.

Burke pleaded not guilty during his initial court appearance on Monday and is due back in court on Thursday. He is being held without the possibility of bail.

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.

200-pound steel sculpture stolen from yard; owner of artwork says “it kind of breaks your heart”

By Brian Maass, Colin McIntyre

Click here for updates on this story

    DENVER (KCNC) — For nearly a decade, Denver resident Vinny Del Giudice admired the sculpture that stood in the front yard of his Congress Park home. It wasn’t just decoration — it was personal. His daughter had welded the piece years earlier and gifted it to her parents.

“It’s your daughter,” said Del Giudice, “and that was one of her first works. She’s become a very accomplished artist.”

The six-foot-long, 200-pound metal sculpture — something of a self-portrait — featured a whimsical figure stretched out on the lawn, feet raised, its face turned toward busy 12th Avenue. It was crafted from steel tubes and rolled flat steel strips.

Over time, the piece became a neighborhood fixture, drawing curiosity and praise from passersby.

“They were all quite impressed,” said Vinny. “It developed a following.”

Then, on the morning of March 27, everything changed.

As Del Giudice set out to walk his dog, a neighbor delivered the news: the sculpture was missing.

“I came home and it was gone,” he said.

Thieves had taken it, leaving behind only one of the statue’s steel “ribs.”

“It was very upsetting, very sad,” he said. “The whole thing was kind of heartbreaking.”

Heartbreaking — but not unusual.

Scrap metal theft has been a fast-growing property crime in the United States for years, driven largely by rising prices for metals. As commodity values increase, so does the incentive to steal.

Todd Foreman, senior director of law enforcement outreach with the Recycled Materials Association, said copper and aluminum thefts are on the rise—and artwork, especially bronze pieces, are increasingly targeted.

“People steal anything they think they can get value out of,” said Foreman. “If they are desperate enough or want that money enough.”

Recent cases in Denver highlight the trend.

In February 2024, thieves stole parts of the Martin Luther King Jr. statue in City Park, including bronze pieces later recovered at a scrapyard. Two suspects were arrested.

Last month, two statues were taken from Holy Ghost Church in downtown Denver. They were eventually recovered — but had been cut up, apparently for scrap. One suspect has been arrested.

“This is terrible for us,” Foreman said. “Artwork that is stolen is more than just metal, its a piece of history, art and culture that’s stolen from a community.”

For Caroline Del Giudice, now a Detroit-based artist who creates and sells large-scale metal works, the loss is deeply personal.

“From the standpoint of an artist, I’m disappointed that somebody stole it,” she said.

Still, she tries to see it another way.

She said while she considers it an “art heist,” she is hoping somebody stole it “because they loved it.”

“So I’m just choosing to believe somebody took it because they liked it so much,” Del Giudice said.

The experience has changed how she works. She now makes sure her large pieces are securely anchored.

The stolen sculpture has been entered into a national scrap metal theft database, asking anyone with information to contact Denver police.

Back in Denver, her father is still shaken.

“Crime is crime. It happens, it’s part of life,” said Vinny Del Giudice. “But if it’s out there we’d love to have it back.”

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.

10-year-old girl in Yuma leads Colorado River rescue

CNN Newsource

YUMA, Ariz. (CNN, KYMA) – A 10-year-old in Yuma is being hailed a hero as the Yuma Police Department (YPD) say her quick actions on the Colorado River helped save a woman from drowning.

It was a typical Sunday afternoon for Grace Lyons and her family at the Colorado River, but everything changed when Lyons got that feeling someone needed help.

“There was a tube and it was popped, so I kind of had like a gut feeling that maybe someone is in trouble…maybe someone is drowning. Maybe someone is hurt,” Lyons shared.

She asked her uncle to come look with her.

“So, we look and I was screaming like, ‘Hello? Is someone down there? Does anyone need help?” And they were like, ‘Help, help. Somebody help. We are stuck in the bush…911 is on their way,'” Lyons detailed.

It was a woman who did not know how to swim, and a man and they were in distress.

According to YPD, the couple tried to swim to shore but stuck in the plants and began to panic. That’s when Lyons heard the cries for help and sprung into action.

“We ran as fast as we can. We grabbed a paddle board and we go on the trail with the paddle board and we have our uncle with us and our dog,” Lyons spoke.

Lyons hopped onto her paddle board along with her uncle and began to paddle down the stream looking for the woman.

“And there was this girl…her name is Christian, and she was lying down like this, but her head was up and she was kind of tangled in these weeds,” Lyons added.

Lyons found her, and with help from her uncle, they put the woman onto Lyons’ paddle board.

“She was crying because she was in shock,” Lyons remarked.

In two years of visiting the river, Lyons says that was the strongest current she has ever seen, but she did what he thought was right.

“I always help everyone, no matter…bigger than me smaller than me,” Lyons expressed.

The woman who was saved was out on the water with her family, and they all got to shore safely.

As for Lyons, she’s taking all this in stride.

Click here to follow the original article.