Family paints American flag in yard to celebrate 250 years of independence

By Chase Rutledge

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    MCLOUD, Oklahoma (KOCO) — An Oklahoma family is showing off their patriotism and honoring 250 years since America declared independence from England by painting a giant American flag in their yard.

Sky 5 flew over the home, showing a beautifully painted American flag in the front yard of their home. The painted flag was surrounded by real American flags and signs honoring the 250th anniversary celebration.

“This is something that’ll definitely make you feel proud to be an American here, especially for those of us that have served in the military and have fought so hard to maintain this independence. We do appreciate whoever this was that painted this,” said Sky 5 Pilot Chase Rutledge, who retired from the Oklahoma National Guard in March 2018 after serving for 26 years. “This is something that can definitely put a smile on your face as we go into this Fourth of July, celebrating 250 years as the United States of America. So, we do appreciate this very, very much.”

A friend of the family who painted the American flag told KOCO 5 that they plan to keep it painted through Memorial Day, Flag Day, and Independence Day.

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Children’s book author Kouri Richins sentenced to life in prison without parole in fatal poisoning of husband

CNN Newsource

By Nicki Brown, CNN

(CNN) — Kouri Richins, a Utah mother who wrote a children’s book on grief after her husband’s death, was sentenced Wednesday to life in prison without parole for his murder.

Judge Richard Mrazik handed down the life sentence – the most severe penalty Richins faced for her aggravated murder conviction – on what would have been her late husband’s 44th birthday.

After a weekslong trial earlier this year, an eight-person jury convicted Richins, 36, of aggravated murder for fatally poisoning her husband, Eric Richins, in March 2022. She was also found guilty of attempted aggravated murder for trying to kill him weeks before his death, on Valentine’s Day, and insurance fraud and forgery related to his life insurance coverage.

“A person convicted of those things is simply too dangerous to ever be free,” Mrazik said during the sentencing. He ordered her to serve consecutive prison sentences for her convictions on the other charges.

Richins shot a look at her defense attorney and raised her eyebrows as the judge handed down the sentence.

Before her sentencing, Richins read aloud a lengthy statement that she addressed to her three young sons.

“As much as you’ve been influenced into thinking that dad was murdered, that I took your dad from you, that is completely wrong. An absolute lie,” Richins said as she sniffled and wiped her nose with tissues. “And the thought of that is still as absurd today as it was four years ago.”

Statements written by the couple’s three boys were read aloud by therapists during the hours-long sentencing hearing. Each one said they would fear for their safety if their mother were ever released from prison.

“You took away everything from me and my brothers. I don’t want you out of jail because I will not feel safe if you are out,” the couple’s middle child, identified as ‘A.R.,’ wrote. “You have never said sorry for anything that you have done to me or my brothers. I don’t want you to hurt anyone again.”

Other members of Eric Richins’ tight-knit family tearfully addressed the court Wednesday as they urged the judge to hand their in-law a life sentence without parole.

“Please do not leave those boys to wonder whether Kouri might track them or their children down in the future,” his sister, Katie Richins-Benson, said. “Please do not create a possibility for Kouri to endanger Eric’s boys, my daughters, my family, or anybody else ever again.”

Kouri Richins’ attorneys argued the judge should impose a lesser sentence, raising the possibility that her children may one day want a relationship with her.

“A life without the possibility of parole, the sentence cannot be changed,” defense attorney Wendy Lewis said. “If Kouri and Eric’s boys someday change their mind and it is too late to say something different than what they’ve said today, this day will become one more day that haunts them.”

Kouri Richins’ loved ones also urged the judge to issue a less severe sentence, describing her as a devoted mother and generous neighbor – with some insisting she had been wrongfully convicted.

“We don’t with 100% certainty know what happened to Eric – no one does,” her brother, Ronney Darden, said. “But we do know with 100% certainty that it wasn’t caused by you.”

Richins’ defense attorneys told the court they plan on appealing the sentence and filing a motion for a new trial.

The judge noted the Utah Board of Pardons and Parole has the authority to release Richins if it determines “by clear and convincing evidence at some future point that she is permanently incapable of being a threat to the safety of society.”

How the trial unfolded

Eric Richins, 39, was found dead in the couple’s home in Kamas, Utah, during the early morning hours of March 4, 2022.

Earlier that night, Eric and Kouri Richins had a drink to celebrate a successful transaction with her real estate business, according to a statement she gave law enforcement. One of their sons was having nightmares, so Kouri Richins went to sleep in his room around 9:30 p.m., she told police.

When she returned to the master bedroom about six hours later, she said, she found her husband dead in their bed.

The autopsy revealed Eric Richins died of a fentanyl overdose, with roughly five times a lethal dose in his blood. Prosecutors argued Kouri Richins slipped the drugs into her husband’s drinks the night of his death, although they did not present evidence supporting this theory at trial.

Over 13 days of testimony, the Summit County Attorney’s Office called more than 40 witnesses, including Eric Richins’ grieving family members, people who exchanged the illicit drugs said to have killed him, Kouri Richins’ paramour and a private investigator hired by the victim’s family. The defense rested its case without calling any witnesses.

The prosecution’s star witness, a housecleaner named Carmen Lauber, testified she sold illicit pills to the Utah mother several times in early 2022. Cell phone data showed her phone near the location where she picked up the drugs on dates close to the attempted murder and fatal poisoning.

Other witnesses testified about Kouri Richins feeling “trapped” in her marriage, her yearslong affair and her business’s ballooning debt – all reasons prosecutors say she killed her husband.

Robert Josh Grossmann, with whom she was having an affair, became emotional on the stand as scores of their affectionate messages were displayed in court.

“I do want a future together. I do want you. Figure life out together,” Kouri Richins texted Grossmann roughly two weeks before her husband died. “If he could just go away and you could just be here! Life would be so perfect!!! I love you.”

Although her friends testified Kouri Richins appeared to be financially successful, a forensic accountant said she was caught in a relentless debt cycle and her real estate business was “imploding.” Eric Richins’ life was insured for about $2.2 million through several policies, including one Kouri Richins was convicted of applying for fraudulently.

“She murdered Eric Richins,” prosecutor Brad Bloodworth said in his closing argument, “and then she submitted a claim to get the money.”

Kouri Richins was also convicted of trying to murder her husband on Valentine’s Day 2022 – ten days after that insurance policy went into effect. Eric Richins called two friends that day and said he felt like he was going to die after eating a sandwich his wife gave him, according to charging documents.

Within weeks, he was dead.

At trial, prosecutors emphasized evidence they said demonstrated Kouri Richins’ guilty conscience after her husband’s death, including search history from her cellphone that showed queries about women’s prisons in Utah, remotely deleting cell phone data and life insurance payments.

The searches included: “what is a lethal.dose.of.fetanayl (sic),” “kouri richins kamas net worth,” and “if someone is poisned (sic) what does it go down on the death certificate as.”

Prosecutors argued that, amid the criminal investigation, Kouri Richins tried to deflect attention away from herself by publishing a children’s book about a year after her husband’s fatal overdose. Kouri Richins said she authored the picture book – titled “Are You With Me?” – to help her three young sons navigate the loss of their father.

“Just because he’s not present here with us physically, that doesn’t mean his presence isn’t here with us,” Richins said while promoting the book on a local news program in April 2023, weeks before her arrest. “Dad is still here. It’s just in a different way.”

This story has been updated with additional information.

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There’s Good News: Project Happy Face returns to Bend Farmers Market with mobile dermatology clinic

Kelsey Merison

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — There’s Good News today, and it has to do with being proactive. Right now, it’s Melanoma Awareness Month.

Throughout May, Project Happy Face is once again bringing its mobile dermatology clinic to the Bend Farmers Market, to offer free skin cancer screenings, biopsies if needed, and treatment for precancerous lesions to farmers market vendors.

Farmers and other food producers spend long hours working outdoors and often put their own healthcare on the back burner, so this is a pretty special effort to bring care directly to the people who help feed our community.

Last year, one melanoma was caught at the market, which really speaks to how important this work is.

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After teacher accused of sex with student in closet at high school, parents question what was taught in biology class

By Cody Alcorn

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    DOUGLAS COUNTY, Georgia (WXIA) — Days after a Douglas County high school teacher was arrested and accused of having sex with a student, parents are now raising a new set of concerns, questioning not only what was happening inside the classroom, but whether students were being properly taught at all.

Parents reached out to 11Alive over the weekend, alleging students in Maris Nichols’ biology classes at Alexander High School were not taught the curriculum expected throughout the school year.

Parents said the allegations involving a student are already disturbing, but now fear some students may have fallen behind academically as testing, grades and course credit deadlines approach.

Nichols, a biology teacher at Alexander High School and operations manager for the school’s football team, was arrested Friday after investigators accused her of having sex with a student on two occasions, including inside a classroom closet on campus and later inside an SUV off campus in Douglas County.

Court records obtained by 11Alive show Nichols is charged with two counts of improper sexual contact by employee, agent or foster parent.

According to warrants, investigators allege Nichols had sex with a student inside a closet shared between classrooms at Alexander High School in April. A second warrant accuses Nichols of having sex with the same student earlier this month inside a Hummer H2 parked at the end of a driveway at a Douglasville home.

Nichols bonded out of jail over the weekend. The criminal investigation remains ongoing.

Now, parents said their frustration is growing not only over the allegations themselves, but over what they describe as a lack of communication and transparency from both the school and district leaders.

Some parents told 11Alive their children described an environment where little instruction was taking place inside the biology classroom throughout much of the school year. Others questioned how the situation was allowed to continue without intervention.

One parent, who asked not to be identified to protect their child’s privacy, said families are still searching for answers.

“As parents, our highest priority is the safety and well being of our children, a responsibility we expect every institution and individual involved to share,” the parent said.

“We’re not asking for special treatment. We are asking for transparency, accountability, and fairness. Unfortunately, our concerns have repeatedly been met with resistance, limited communication, and a lack of meaningful reassurance that appropriate measures are being taken to protect all children involved, including our own.”

11Alive reached out to the Douglas County School System regarding the allegations that Nichols failed to teach the required biology curriculum throughout the school year.

In a statement sent Monday evening, a district spokesperson said, “The Douglas County School System is committed to the academic success of every student. We are not able to comment further on this matter at this time.”

11Alive has also repeatedly asked district leaders whether Nichols remains employed by the school system. Those questions have gone unanswered.

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.

Man arrested for sexual abuse at Target in Yuma

Marcos Icahuate

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – A Yuma man is facing a sexual abuse charge after police say he followed a woman through a Target store and made unwanted sexual contact with her earlier this year.

According to the Yuma Police Department (YPD), officers received a report on February 24 about a sex offense that occurred at the Target on East Yuma Palms Parkway.

Investigators say an adult female victim was being followed throughout the store by an unknown man, who eventually engaged in unwanted sexual contact before leaving the area in a white sedan.

Police later identified the suspect as 22-year-old Gadiel Flores Castro on April 27 after investigators asked for community assistance.

“We’ve got video footage. Nothing was recognized in reference to that,” Sgt. Lori Franklin, Public Information Officer for YPD, said. “So we actually put it out on social media asking for community help. It was identified pretty quickly.”

Castro was taken into custody on April 28 and booked into the Yuma County Detention Center on a charge of sexual abuse.

On May 7, Castro was indicted on one count of sexual abuse. He remains in custody on a $100,000 bond.

YPD encourages anyone with any information about this case to please call 928-373-4700 or 78-CRIME at 928-782-7463 to remain anonymous.

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Yuma students lead the way in sustainable farming research

Manoah Tuiasosopo

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – Students in Yuma are stepping beyond the classroom and into the field through a unique University of Arizona program focused on sustainable farming, pest management, and the future of agriculture in the desert Southwest.

The university’s Junior Vegetable Integrated Pest Management (IPM) team gives undergraduate students hands-on experience in agricultural science while helping local growers tackle real-world challenges.

From invasive insects to environmentally friendly pest control methods, students are conducting research that directly impacts one of Yuma’s most important industries.

The program is funded through a federal USDA NIFA Crop Protection and Pest Management grant and is managed by Macey Keith.

Keith says the program is designed to give students a safe environment to learn through hands-on experience before entering the professional world.

“But this program has been really great I think to help all the students at every level understand what they’re passionate about, what they wanna do, what they don’t wanna do,” Keith said.

Students in the program work alongside university researchers in several agricultural fields, including entomology, plant pathology, and weed science.

One student researcher, Josett Clark, focused her research on the Diamondback moth, a major threat to local crops.

Clark studied behavioral control methods aimed at stopping the pests before they can damage fields by laying eggs.

Her research explored the use of UV lights and sweet alyssum flowers to attract and trap moths before they become a larger problem for growers.

Clark’s work earned her a travel grant to present her findings at the Entomological Society of America conference in Spokane, Washington.

“There’s always overlap between these different areas of agriculture, so entomology is something you always want to be knowledgeable on,” Clark said.

Another student researcher, Rosaelba Soto, studied biological pest control methods involving lady beetles and aphids in organic crops such as lettuce and broccoli.

Soto says the experience expanded her understanding of how insects affect overall plant health and shifted her career goals.

“My interests were in plant pathology when I started this, but learning about IPM made me learn about the importance that pests play also in plant pathology as insect vectors…so it really does go hand in hand,” Soto explained.

Researchers say the students’ work not only benefits local agriculture but also helps build the next generation of scientists and agricultural leaders in Yuma.

The students recently showcased their research during the university’s “Celebration of Knowledge” event, where community members were able to view student presentations and learn more about the ongoing projects.

As several students prepare to graduate and continue into careers or advanced degrees in agriculture and science, university leaders say their research is already making a lasting impact on the region’s farming community

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Local YUHSD seniors receive scholarships

Madeline Murray

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – Yuma Union High School District (YUHSD) seniors received an unforgettable surprise this week as several students were awarded scholarships worth up to $60,000 through the Helios Education Foundation.

Among the students surprised was Valeria Gutierrez, a senior at San Luis High School, who said the moment was overwhelming.

“I feel like it is not hitting me right now because it just happened,” Gutierrez said. “But I did not expect it at all. I really didn’t.”

The scholarships are part of a long-standing partnership between the Helios Education Foundation and YUHSD, which district leaders say has changed the lives of countless students over the past decade.

“Ten years of the scholarship ultimately results in about three and a half million dollars of investment in Yuma County students,” said Eric Patten with YUHSD. “We couldn’t be more grateful or pleased to work with Helios and see the impact they’ve made on our students.”

District officials said 89 students applied for the scholarship this year through the Arizona Community Foundation.

Applications opened in January, and after the review process, one student is selected from each campus.

Each scholarship can cover full tuition at Arizona’s in-state universities, including Northern Arizona University, Arizona State University, and University of Arizona. Students attending out-of-state schools can receive up to $15,000 annually toward tuition.

“This really opens doors for lots of students to possibilities they may not have thought were there,” Patten said.

Patten said many students in previous years believed college was financially out of reach before receiving the scholarship.

“I’ve encountered plenty of students in past years who said they were intending on going to a two-year school or not going to school because their family couldn’t afford it,” Patten said. “This scholarship opens the door to cover full tuition for in-state schools.”

So far, students at three of the district’s six high schools have received their scholarship surprises, while announcements for students at Kofa High School, Cibola High School, and Vista High School are still to come.

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Fire destroys Blue Church in Slab City

Marcos Icahuate

IMPERIAL COUNTY, Calif. (KYMA) – A fire tore through parts of Slab City Monday night in the Salton Sea area of Imperial County.

The Imperial County Fire Department was called to a trailer used as a makeshift church called the Blue Church.

The church structure and several nearby trailers were destroyed.

According to the Imperial County Sheriff’s Office blotter report, a person was seen in the area before the fire broke out. They noted very little cooperation from witnesses.

The cause of the fire has not been determined yet.

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Man dies after broadside car crash on State Route 86

Marcos Icahuate

IMPERIAL COUNTY, Calif. (KYMA) – A 50-year-old man died after a crash on State Route 86, according to California Highway Patrol (CHP).

On Monday, at about 8:27 p.m., a 25-year-old woman was driving a Honda Accord eastbound on Norm Niver Road and was nearing the stop sign at an intersection on State Route 86.

The woman drove into the same lane as a Kia Spectra traveling southbound, according to CHP.

The front of the Kia drove into the left side of the Honda, causing both cars to lose control.

Both the driver of the Honda and her other passenger had major injuries, while a 50-year-old passenger in the Honda was ejected from his seat and was pronounced dead on scene.

The 41-year-old driver of the Kia had moderate injuries and wanted to find his own medical attention, according to CHP.

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Barber released from ICE detention after 15 months as deportation appeal continues

By Kaitlyn Ross

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    ATLANTA (WXIA) — Rodney Taylor, the Georgia barber whose immigration detention case drew national attention, spoke publicly for the first time Monday since he was released from ICE custody after spending 15 months inside Stewart Detention Center in south Georgia.

Taylor was released on conditional parole while he continues appealing his deportation case, according to his attorneys.

Taylor, a triple amputee who worked as a barber in Tucker, was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement over a conviction from his teens that was later pardoned by the state of Georgia.

“Me walking through that door, it’s a feeling, it’s a feeling I can’t even describe,” Taylor told 11Alive after his release.

Taylor came to the United States from Liberia as a child to receive medical treatment. Born with a genetic condition affecting his limbs, he underwent amputations after arriving in the U.S. and has lived in the country for decades.

When he was 16 years old, Taylor pleaded guilty to burglary. He later received a pardon from the Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles in 2010.

Despite the pardon, ICE detained Taylor in early 2025 and moved to deport him to Liberia, a country he said he has no memory of since arriving in the United States as a toddler.

His case sparked criticism and concern from immigration advocates, elected officials and supporters across Georgia.

During his detention, Taylor alleged he was denied proper accommodations for his disability and retaliated against after speaking out about conditions inside the facility.

11Alive reached out to ICE and CoreCivic, the company that operates Stewart Detention Center, for comment regarding Taylor’s allegations. In a statement, the company claimed Taylor had “every accommodation made for his disability.” (Read more of the statement at the bottom of this story).

Taylor said leaving detention brought relief, but he remains focused on the people still being held inside.

“These are human beings, yet they treat us like cattle ready to be slaughtered, or in this case, deported,” Taylor said.

Over the course of his detention, Taylor’s family regularly traveled several hours to Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin to visit him.

Even while detained, Taylor continued cutting hair for fellow detainees preparing for immigration hearings, according to his family and attorneys.

His case also drew support from members of Congress, including Lucy McBath.

“They spoke out and they refused to let Rodney’s story be ignored,” McBath said. “That’s the kind of love and determination that creates change.”

Taylor’s wife, Mildred Pierre, told 11Alive the couple faced significant challenges while trying to maintain their relationship during his detention, including while planning their wedding.

“Even the simple thing of getting married, that was not easy,” Pierre said with a laugh. “And Rodney owes me a big wedding.”

Taylor remains on conditional release while his immigration appeal continues. His attorneys say they are continuing to fight for his right to remain in the United States permanently.

“One thing remains true,” Taylor said. “The power is still with the people. That power cannot be deported, it cannot be detained. And it definitely cannot be silenced.”

Below is the statement 11Alive received from the company.

Mr. Taylor had every accommodation made for his disability. He was offered the option to come to the medical unit daily to charge his prosthesis equipment, which he did regularly. On days he chose not to come to the medical unit, he had access to charge his medical equipment in the multipurpose room in his housing unit. SDC medical staff and his unit manager were all aware of the situation and helped facilitate his needs.

Individuals at SDC have daily access to sign up for medical care, and our clinic is staffed with licensed healthcare professionals, including physicians, nurse practitioners, psychiatrists, psychologists, mental health counselors and dentists who contractually meet the highest standards of care, as verified by multiple audits and inspections. ICE’s Health Services Corps (IHSC) conducted a site audit of SDC’s health services on June 2, 2025, and found no deficiencies.

SDC’s water comes from the same municipal source that serves the surrounding community and is subject to regular independent testing. Our staff regularly drinks the water. The physical conditions of the facility, including plumbing and infrastructure, are maintained in accordance with federal detention standards and subject to regular inspection and audit by our government partners without prior notice.

CoreCivic maintains a zero-tolerance policy for retaliation against individuals in our care. Detainees have multiple avenues to raise concerns, including toll-free telephone numbers and direct access to management staff. Concerns can also be submitted through ICE’s ERO Detention, Removals and Information Line.

CoreCivic is proud of the more than 400 dedicated staff members at SDC who show up every day committed to the safety, dignity and well-being of everyone in our care.

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.