Country Club Road in Sunland Park reopens after crash, man airlifted with critical injuries

Gabrielle Lopez

UPDATE (4:44 p.m.): All lanes reopened, according to the City of Sunland Park.

SUNLAND PARK, N.M. (KVIA) — A Sunland Park spokesperson said a crash closed Country Club Road between Crawford Road and Westside Drive. A man in his mid-20s has critical injuries, Sunland Park Fire said on X.

According to SPF’s fire chief, the man was flown out to UMC for treatment. El Paso’s fired department helped with the transport.

The road closure notice sent at 3:38 p.m. Thursday.

The spokesperson said drivers can use Westside Drive as an alternate route. SPF said the road closure will last one hour while it investigates the crash.

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Contract negotiations for Boone County children’s organization start amid funding shortfall

Alison Patton

Editor’s note: Reinke’s position has been clarified.

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Boone County Children’s Services Board started contract negotiations Thursday with a children’s program that provides social, emotional or behavioral support to school-aged children.

This comes a couple of months after the Family Access Center of Excellence was asked to cut about $1.6 million ahead of the 2027-28 school year, and after a $3.6 million contract was already issued for the current year.

The board said the funding cut is not based on FACE’s performance.

“This decision is not a reflection of the quality of FACE’s work, leadership or partnerships. Rather, it is a necessary fiscal action to protect the integrity and sustainability of the Children’s Services Fund as a whole,” according to a document for Thursday’s meeting.

FACE leadership presented ways it can reduce spending and fit some of its programs into the proposed $2 million budget.

Many of FACE’s programs will transition from community-based to school-based services, leadership will see salary cuts, and the organization’s social media, in-person offices and emails could be shut down.

“The biggest thing is that families will no longer have access to these services, which provided case management to families to help them navigate the system,” said Wendy Reinke, who is an evaluation consultant and member of the FACE leadership team.

Reinke said staffing will also need to be slashed.

“Our budget was entirely personnel, and when you lose $1.6 million, you lose $1.6 million for the people who are out there providing those services to our community,” Reinke said.

Hallsville School District spokesperson Kari Yeagy said the district’s family intervention specialist has worked with 19 students who need group or individual support, and 15 of those students currently work with FACE for support.

“The partnership with FACE helps bridge gaps in access to mental health and community resources by providing an added layer of family support and coordination services that would otherwise be challenging to sustain solely through existing school staffing,” Yeagy wrote in an email to ABC 17 News.

Jodie Ashby, a FACE family intervention specialist, spoke during the public comment period at the meeting to show just how much FACE staff mean to district schools and families.

“I guess my hope in speaking to you today is to, in an ideal world, prevent these cuts entirely,” Ashby said. “I sincerely urge the board to explore all possible avenues to retain as much funding as possible for this critical organization.”

She also read statements from teachers, most of whom said they see progress and growth within students who need FACE support.

Boone County Community Services Director Joanne Nelson told ABC 17 News that the funding issue stems from a surplus of sales tax money in the children’s services fund when it was first established. The surplus funds have been awarded, and the fund balance has to meet county requirements. Now, funding could stay stagnant.

A new contract with FACE won’t be enacted until after the county passes its budget in December.

Nelson said other programs that receive the children’s services funds could be affected in the coming years.

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Former deputy sentenced to 9 years in federal prison for child porn charge

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A former Camden County deputy and school resource officer was sentenced to nine years in prison for charges related to child sex abuse materials.

Darrin Skinner, 52, was convicted of receiving child sex abuse materials. He will have 10 years of supervised probation after he is released from prison.

According to previous reporting, court documents say Skinner uploaded child porn to a social media website from Oct. 2, 2020-June 28 2022.

Skinner allegedly admitted to owning the social media account and receiving child sex abuse materials, but denied sending any, court documents say.

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No students injured in Hallsville bus crash

Matthew Sanders

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

No students were hurt when a Hallsville School District bus was involved in a crash near the end of its route Thursday.

District spokesperson Kari Yeagy said the district transportation director was en route to the scene on Highway 124. Seven students were on the bus at the time, but no injuries were reported, Yeagy wrote in response to emailed questions.

The students, who live on Bentwood Lane and Highway 124, would board another bus to be dropped off after the scene was cleared by emergency personnel, according to a message the district sent to families.

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Inside the tense GOP standoff over special ed funding bill

Kevin Richert

Originally posted on IdahoEdNews.org on May 14, 2026

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho — Late in the 2026 legislative session, a $5 million plan to support Idaho’s most vulnerable students hung in the balance.

A moderate Republican tried to rally support for the special education bill, reaching out to three of his local school leaders. But Rep. Ben Fuhriman’s email backfired — infuriating Rep. Barbara Ehardt, one of the House’s most influential conservatives.

“I almost torpedoed the whole thing,” said Rep. Ben Fuhriman, R-Shelley, referring to his email exchange on the high-needs special education bill. (Sean Dolan/EdNews)

The email thread, thick with tension, jumped quickly as a brushfire. State superintendent Debbie Critchfield and House GOP leadership were soon looped in.

The special education bill did not go up in smoke, as Fuhriman feared it might. Senate Bill 1288 passed, and with Ehardt’s support. Beginning July 1, school districts and charters will be able to tap into the $5 million to cover the cost of serving high-needs special education students who need full-time staff assistance or expensive learning materials.

The emails — obtained by Idaho Education News, through a public records request — shed new light on the tensions within Idaho’s Republican supermajority. Tensions that define the debate over special education funding. Tensions that will play out in Tuesday’s GOP legislative primaries.

A cast of characters — and a GOP divided

The key figures in this debate represent the various factions within the Idaho GOP.

Fuhriman, R-Shelley, is a first-term lawmaker and a survivor of the closest race in the 2024 primary. Fuhriman defeated Blackfoot Republican Julianne Young, a prominent social conservative, by a scant four votes. Since then, Fuhriman has been at the forefront of the special education issue. He carried an unsuccessful high-needs bill in 2025. Earlier this year, he co-sponsored a nonbinding memorial urging the feds to increase special education spending.

Fuhriman and Young will square off again in Tuesday’s primary.

Ehardt, R-Idaho Falls, is a fifth-term lawmaker who falls squarely into the House’s social conservative camp. In 2020, she co-sponsored Idaho’s first-in-the-nation legislation banning transgender athletes from competing in women’s and girls’ sports — a law now before the United States Supreme Court. She faces a primary challenger next week, Connor Cook, who says Idaho has “gone rogue,” losing sight of common sense.

The high-needs special education funding bill was state superintendent Debbie Critchfield’s top priority for the 2026 legislative session. (Sean Dolan/EdNews)

Unlike Fuhriman and Ehardt, Critchfield is unopposed in the GOP primary. But Critchfield overcame stiff resistance — all from her own party — as she secured support for the breakthrough high-needs program. While legislative co-sponsors would come and go through the session, one thing was constant; the high-needs program was Critchfield’s top priority for the 2026 session. The bill passed with comfortable bipartisan majorities, but 33 Republicans still voted against it.

One of those 33 lawmakers was Rep. Dale Hawkins, R-Fernwood. One of the House’s hardline conservatives, Hawkins says the high-needs program puts public education in a role better served by health and welfare agencies. The first-year chairman of House Education Committee gave the high-needs bill a committee hearing on the morning of March 20, hours after the Fuhriman-Ehardt email exchange.

‘I am so mad. … This is not how we do business’

The Senate had already passed the high-needs bill, but the House Education hearing was pivotal. The email blitz unfolded over four hours on March 19 — the afternoon before the hearing.

12:20 p.m.: Fuhriman received an unsigned note from the House Education email account, saying he is on the March 20 agenda to present the high-needs bill.

1:06 p.m.: Fuhriman urged three Eastern Idaho superintendents — Jeff Gee of Ririe, Douglas McLaren of Shelley and Basil Morris of Firth — to make a last-minute and targeted push for high-needs funding. Fuhriman’s appeal focused on just one lawmaker: Ehardt, who had opposed the 2025 version of the bill.

“Barb is a swing vote,” Fuhriman wrote. “With it being an election year and her having a legitimate opponent, she’s approaching things a little differently this session. Regardless of the dynamics, we really need her vote to move this bill out of committee.”

None of the superintendents emailed Ehardt. But Ehardt also received Fuhriman’s email — and moved quickly.

1:33 p.m.: “I have not sent a response yet. But I am so mad that I am considering what I will do,” Ehardt said in an email to Hawkins. “I’m disturbed by the comment that I am approaching things differently due to an election year …  I have not approached anything differently. Very disturbing. This is not how we do business.”

In an interview this week, Rep. Barbara Ehardt talked about her reaction to Rep. Ben Fuhriman’s email on the high-needs bill. “I’m like, you are still a newbie, you have no idea what’s going on,” said Ehardt, R-Idaho Falls. (Brandon Schertler/EdNews)

2:38 p.m.: Fuhriman received another email from House Education, saying his high-needs presentation “has been canceled.”

2:47 p.m.: House Education emailed Rep. Ron Mendive, R-Coeur d’Alene, and said he is scheduled to present on the high-needs bill.

3:34 p.m.: Ehardt replied to Fuhriman and the superintendents. “This email is very inappropriate. If this is how business is conducted, then I will not be a part of it.”

Ehardt decided to add the four members of House GOP leadership to the thread. “If this is how we’re going to act, they’re going to be repercussions,” Ehardt told EdNews in an interview this week.

Ehardt also looped in Critchfield and Brennan Summers, Critchfield’s chief governmental affairs officer, and point person on the high-needs bill. Ehardt directed much of her email to them. “I thought our discussions, to this point, had been productive in an effort to advance this. I appreciated your efforts to move money around and find a way to make it happen. Maybe I was mistaken.”

3:51 p.m.: Moving quickly into damage control, Critchfield emailed Ehardt and the entire group. “I can and will vouch that we have been talking and working with you in good faith. …  I’d love to visit with you and I’ll come find you!”

3:54 p.m.: Ehardt forwarded the entire thread to another key legislator: Rep. Josh Tanner, R-Eagle. As co-chair of the Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee, Tanner plays a pivotal role in funding, or not funding, initiatives such as the high-needs program.

How we got the emails

To better understand the debate over the special education high-needs bill, Idaho Education News filed a public records request for emails to and from several key legislators — including Rep. Dale Hawkins, R-Fernwood, chair of the House Education Committee; Rep. Josh Tanner, R-Eagle, co-chair of the Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee; and Rep. Ben Fuhriman, R-Shelley.

EdNews filed its request on April 20. The Legislative Services Office supplied the emails on May 4, the 10-day deadline, under state public records law. LSO did not charge EdNews for the emails.

‘It was a boneheaded stupid mistake’

Fuhriman didn’t intend to send his email to Ehardt. As he wrote to the school superintendents, Fuhriman wanted to doublecheck the spelling of Ehardt’s name. He typed Ehardt’s initials alongside the superintendents’ names, knowing her full name would automatically pop up in his email address book.

Then he pressed “send,” inadvertently delivering the email to Ehardt as well as the superintendents.

“It was a boneheaded stupid mistake that I made,” Fuhriman said this week.

He was on the House floor when he saw Ehardt’s reply. Mortified, he asked Summers, Critchfield’s aide, for advice about what to do next. Fuhriman decided to apologize, and went to Ehardt’s desk when the House went into recess. “I just stared at her and nodded and let her have her little moment, and I just took my whipping,” Fuhriman told EdNews.

In an EdNews interview this week, Ehardt didn’t walk back her reaction. “I thought that was pretty gosh darn low, manipulative, I could go on.” But she also told Fuhriman that she would drop the matter.

Rep. Dale Hawkins, R-Fernwood, was one of 33 legislative Republicans who voted against the high-needs bill. (Sean Dolan/EdNews)

Hawkins overheard the exchange on the House floor.

“He walked past me, stopped, got right in my face, swore at me, and then told me, if it was up to him … that bill would never see the light of day,” Fuhriman said.

Hawkins has a different version.

“The only thing I can tell you is I don’t curse at anyone,” he said in a written response to EdNews Wednesday. “I did tell him his manipulation against Rep. Ehardt was uncalled for. She was already for the bill.”

The committee hearing: the calm after the storm

House Education’s March 19 emails to Fuhriman and Mendive suggests Fuhriman was yanked off the committee’s agenda abruptly, and right after his dustup with Ehardt.

In his message to EdNews, Hawkins didn’t respond to a question about the timing. But Fuhriman said he had pulled his name from the high-needs bill long before March 19, and never expected to be on the committee’s agenda.

Rep. Ron Mendive, R-Coeur d’Alene, center, carried the high-needs bill on the House floor. He is flanked by Reps. Douglas Pickett, R-Oakley, and Barbara Ehardt, R-Idaho Falls. (Sean Dolan/EdNews)

But Mendive was on the agenda, in a clear attempt to broaden the base of support. Fuhriman and Mendive are far apart on ideology. Mendive, a seven-term legislative veteran, is aligned with the House’s conservative wing — and with lawmakers like Ehardt and Hawkins.

And after the behind-the-scenes bickering on March 19, the March 20 committee hearing was a breeze.

Ehardt praised Critchfield for finding the $5 million within her department, proposing one-time transfers to start the program. “We want our departments to use their money wisely, instead of continually asking for more money.”

Hardline opponents — and even Hawkins — agreed to send the bill to the House floor for a final vote. It came out of committee on a unanimous voice vote.

The House passed the bill on March 24. Gov. Brad Little signed it into law a week later.

What happens next? The elections will make a difference

The future of the high-needs program will rest with the 2027 Legislature. Because Critchfield used one-time money for this year’s startup, lawmakers will have to decide whether to keep the program going — and how much to spend on it.

In other words, the future of the high-needs bill is intertwined with the 2026 legislative elections, especially the GOP primaries. Across the state, mainstream Republicans and hardliners will square off. Collectively, these outcomes will determine the ideological core of the Legislature’s Republican caucuses. They will, in turn, decide the makeup of the GOP’s leadership teams, and the makeup of the committees that write budgets and set education policy.

In Eastern Idaho, in legislative districts just a few miles apart, Ehardt and Fuhriman are embroiled in two such races.

Ehardt is being challenged from the center. Her opponent, Cook, secured the Idaho Education Association’s endorsement Wednesday.

Fuhriman is being challenged from the right. Twenty-four months removed from a race decided by a quartet of votes, the Fuhriman-Young rematch will be one of the most closely watched races of Election Night.

Ehardt will be watching. She considers Young a friend. When they served together in the House, they were solidly in sync on social issues.

But Ehardt says she has kept her word to Fuhriman, and has never told Young about the high-needs scuffle.

“I never want to be that person,” she said.

Kevin Richert writes a weekly analysis on education policy and education politics. Look for his stories each Thursday. 

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Man accused of murdering Fulton State Hospital patient indicted by grand jury

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A man who was accused of killing a Fulton State Hospital patient while he was a patient in 2025 was indicted by a Callaway County grand jury on Thursday.

Jabril Kanatzar is charged with first-degree murder and misdemeanor fourth-degree assault in the death of Christos Karagiannis.

An arraignment for the indictment is scheduled for 9 a.m. Monday in Callaway County.

According to court documents in previous reporting, Kanatzar attacked Karagiannis, 53, on Jan. 6, 2025. Karagiannis died from his injuries days later.

Court documents in previous reporting claim Kanatzar followed Karagiannis around in the day room of the facility and attacked him once Karagiannis turned his back. Kanatzar continued the attack as Karagiannis was unconscious, court documents say.

Court filings show Kanatzar contested a mental health evaluation on May 1 that determined he is competent to proceed in court.

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Helicopter crash reported at Magic Valley Regional Airport

KMVT

Updated: 4:40 p.m. — Originally Published: May 14, 2026 at 2:20 PM MDT

By Jennifer Williams

TWIN FALLS, Idaho (KMVT/KSVT) — A helicopter crashed at the Magic Valley Regional Airport around 1:50 p.m., according to a release by the city of Twin Falls.

There was one occupant in the helicopter that was able to walk away and was treated for non-life threatening injuries. No other aircraft were involved in the incident.

The crash happened at the west end of the airport. The Magic Valley Regional Airport closed the scene of the crash for the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigation.

The crash is not impacting air traffic, Josh Palmer, public information officer with the city of Twin Falls, told KMVT.

This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.

Copyright 2026 KMVT. All rights reserved.

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Juárez man sentenced to prison for human smuggling: DOJ

Gabrielle Lopez

EL PASO, Texas (KVIA) — A 54-year-old man from Juárez was sentenced in El Paso to 42 months in prison for human smuggling. Thursday, the Justice Department said he used tunnels crossing the U.S.-Mexico border and storm drains. He had legal permanent resident status.

The DOJ said Ricardo Guadalupe Dominguez, along with other members of a human smuggling organization, used underground paths and connecting storm drains to bring people into the U.S. from Mexico. Dominguez facilitated the smuggling by providing cars and tools to tamper storm drains, the department said.

According to the DOJ, Dominguez was identified as being involved with the construction of a cross-border tunnel discovered in January of 2025.

Law enforcement arrested him while trying to cross the Paso Del Norte Port of Entry, the DOJ said. He pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to bring in migrants in December 2025.

The DOJ said another man and co-defendant, Oscar Ivan Carrillo, was sentenced to 33 months in federal prison for conspiracy to use a border tunnel. The department said Carrillo and others would guide migrants through the tunnels into the U.S. At the exit, a box truck with a trap door would drive over a manhole cover for them to climb into.

Courtesy: U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Texas

The Justice Department said Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations and the U.S. Border Patrol investigated the case.

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Hoskins responds to Boone County clerk’s letter: ‘Missouri First Map remains in effect’

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Missouri Secretary of State Denny Hoskins issued a response on Thursday to a letter from the Boone County Clerk that claimed she could not redraw congressional district lines within the county in accordance with the ‘Missouri First’ map.

Boone County Clerk Brianna Lennon wrote in a letter on Tuesday that she couldn’t update voter rolls until the Secretary of State’s Office made a move on a referendum petition from December. The petition seeks to put the new congressional map, approved by the Missouri General Assembly last year, to a vote of the people.

The highly debated “Missouri First Map” will be in effect going into the August primary, Hoskins’ news release states.

A press release from the SOS’s office says it has now “issued formal guidance to local election authorities statewide, instructing them to continue election preparation activities — including candidate filing, ballot programming, and precinct assignments — based on the congressional districts established under House Bill 1’s Missouri First Map.”

The Missouri Supreme Court handed down multiple rulings on Tuesday over the mid-decade redrawn House district maps. Its rulings led to upholding the map, claiming petitioners did not prove the map “clearly and undoubtedly” violates Article 3 of the Missouri Constitution.

Lennon rebutted Hoskins’ release in a text message to ABC 17 News.

“The Secretary of State’s Office still has not made the necessary updates to the statewide voter registration system to let any clerk update their precincts to reflect the new maps, so there isn’t any action that can be taken at this time.””

Letter to Local Election Authorities 051426Download

The ruling also claims that submitting a referendum petition did not automatically suspend the bill that created the new map. Lennon claimed “no actionable legal information as to what congressional district map is in effect” because the SOS’s office did not issue its own decision.

Debate over Lennon’s letter occurred on the Missouri Senate floor on Thursday, with Sen. Rick Brattin (R-Cass County) filing a remonstrance, which is a form of protest or grievance a lawmaker can file. Brattin also introduced a non-binding motion calling on Lennon to carry out her election duties by the end of Thurday or potentially face removal efforts.

Sen. Stephen Webber (D-Columbia) showed support for Lennon during the floor discussion.

Gov. Mike Kehoe said during a press conference he respects the SOS’s deadline for Lennon. However, he said he also supports the public voting on the new map.

“Secretary of State Hoskins has a lot of responsibility. I respect the timing that he determines is appropriate for that,” he said.

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The new map would split Boone County between the Fifth District, which stretches to the Kansas border, and the Third District, which stretches to the Illinois border. The Republican-dominated legislature redrew the Fifth District, which now serves Kansas City, to eliminate the safe Democratic seat held by U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver.

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Jackson issues urgent warning over sophisticated phishing scam

Seth Ratliff

JACKSON, WYO (KIFI) — The Town of Jackson has issued an urgent warning to residents following a wave of fraudulent emails targeting local homeowners and business owners.

According to an official statement, scammers are currently impersonating the Town’s Planning/Building Department and the Planning Director. The phishing emails are reportedly asking for payment for planning, building, and liquor license fees.

“These are not legitimate communications…If you receive a suspicious email from the Town, do not click on it or respond,” said town leadership in an official email.

Town leadership is emphasizing that any legitimate digital communication will only come from addresses ending in “@jacksonwy.gov.”

As cybercriminals adopt advanced AI technology to craft more convincing messages, town leadership is urging people to watch for red flags.

“Be cautious about unexpected emails or text messages, especially requests for sensitive information, ‘urgent’ action, or payment,” states the official email.

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