Supreme Court case could impact farmworker protections across Arizona

Adrik Vargas

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – A case headed to the U.S. Supreme Court could change how labor protections for farmworkers are enforced nationwide, including in Arizona farming communities like Yuma County.

The case involves Sun Valley Orchards, a New Jersey farm accused of violating rules tied to the H-2A guest worker program.

The Supreme Court will decide whether labor violation cases should continue to be handled through the U.S. Department of Labor’s internal system or move through federal courts instead.

Farmworker advocates say the outcome could have major consequences for workers reporting unsafe conditions.

“Farmworkers rely on the good faith of their employers as protections,” said Jazmin Moreno, a farmworker advocate with Agave Threads.

Moreno said she worries requiring more cases to go through federal courts could slow enforcement and discourage workers from speaking out.

“Here comes another barrier for them to have a stable work environment and dignity at their workplace,” Moreno said. “Farmworkers across the country are continuously exploited and met with unsafe working conditions.”

She said farmworkers she has spoken with in Yuma are often afraid to report problems out of fear of deportation or losing housing tied to their jobs.

“We know that with the specific visa that H-2A workers are tied to their employer,” Moreno said. “Violations are rampant because who is going to go against the people who feed you, clothe you and give you a roof?”

The Supreme Court is expected to hear arguments later this year, with a ruling anticipated by mid-2027.

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The School Buzz: Colorado Springs charter school dominates choir competition, ranked best 3rd straight year

Josh Helmuth

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – Students from The Vanguard School are hitting all the right notes — and bringing home some major honors in the process.

Both the charter school’s High School Choir and Chamber Choir competed at the Best of the West Competition in Grand Junction last month, and both groups earned the competition’s top rating — a Superior ranking.

That means, out of five possible scores from the judges, they received the highest possible marks.

But the celebration didn’t stop there.

After performances wrapped up, judges announced that Vanguard had also earned the Overall Best Choir Award in the 3A category, beating out choirs from across the two-day competition.

One judge even told the group:

“We have seen many choirs the last two days, but you were the first to give me goosebumps.”

This also marks the third straight year Vanguard choirs have earned Superior rankings.

Nikki Smith, the choir teacher at The Vanguard School, says the students work incredibly hard, coming in at 7:30 a.m. and showing up day in and day out.

Smith says the students are amazing and that the program continues to grow every year.

“Choir may seem easy, but there are so many technical things needed to put everything together. The students at The Vanguard School truly do exemplify excellence!” she said.

And the success keeps coming.

Smith emailed over the weekend to share that Vanguard’s junior high students also received a gold ranking at the Elitch Gardens Music Festival on Friday. It was the first time the group had ever competed and they earned a top score in their debut.

Is there someone or something remarkable at your school? Email us at SchoolBuzz@KRDO.com.

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Video shows brawl outside hot dog vendor carts in latest troubling incident

By Jeff Nguyen

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    WEST HOLLYWOOD, California (KCAL, KCBS) — Cell phone video captured a fight between two women outside a pair of hot dog vendor carts in West Hollywood over the weekend, which local business owners say is just the latest in a troubling trend in the area.

It happened early Sunday morning on Santa Monica Boulevard, where multiple street vendors often set up, according to Larry Block, who owns the nearby Block Party Store.

Surveillance camera footage from Block’s store shows vendors dumping what he says is bacon grease from the carts, leaving the pavement stained and slippery.

“Then the rats get in there, and the rats come into the store,” Block said. “We have a number of infestations. We have a number of rats in the city.”

On top of that, Block says that vendors have been violent at times.

“I had asked them to move, and they went to punch me in the eye after I had eye surgery last year,” Block said.

He’s one of several business owners in the area who have expressed concerns about fire hazards from the vendors’ carts, many of which they say aren’t licensed. Cellphone video from last summer shows one hot dog cart engulfed in flames as customers stand by.

Block said that he also believes many of the workers at the hot dog stands are underage.

“A truck lines up on San Vicente somewhere around 9:30, 10 o’clock in the evening and 30 carts come off this truck at a time,” Block said.

West Hollywood Mayor John Heilman says that a 2019 law decriminalized street vending, so enforcement has become increasingly difficult, even if the vendors are operating across the street from the sheriff’s station.

“It’s tough to enforce, because some of the vendors go out there and they’re only out there for an hour or two,” Heilman said. “By the time our code enforcement officers arrive, they’re gone, or they move.”

Additional difficulties in addressing the issue include politicization, which has increased since immigration enforcement operations became more common last year, according to WeHo Times publisher Paulo Murrillo.

“Anyone whose criticized them, like, they get called racist and it just becomes a whole different thing,” Murrillo said.

Business owners say that they’ve been complaining about the problem, but they are not getting support from city hall on an issue they say shouldn’t be politicized.

“Everybody is suffering from fear of speaking up, because they’ve been batted down for being against immigrants,” Block said.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, who are investigating the brawl from the weekend, says that they’ve spoken with the alleged victim but have not been able to track down the other person involved yet.

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.

Burglars use bear spray on family’s dog during break-in, homeowner says

By Jasmine Viel

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    LA CANADA, California (KCAL, KCBS) — Security cameras showed the moment three masked suspects crept through the backyard of a La Cañada home before forcing their way inside.

Homeowner Diana Avetyan said the break-in happened last week, when no one was home except her dog, Chloe. She said the suspects used bear spray on her dog before ransacking her bedrooms.

Moments later, the security cameras captured the suspects rushing out Avetyan’s door with pillowcases stuffed with jewelry, handbags and family heirlooms, such as her grandfather’s watch.

She said the suspects were carrying signal jammers inside their backpacks that disabled portions of the home’s security system. Avetyan said the cameras captured what appeared to be a white Kia waiting nearby before the security system cut out.

“Disgusted and violated extremely,” said Avetyan, describing how the burglary made her feel. “You feel safe, but not anymore.”

Avetyan believes the group could be tied to other recent break-ins in Los Angeles.

In Studio City last Friday, two masked suspects used bear spray on Steve Calabro after he confronted them during a break-in at his neighbor’s home. He said the thieves drove off in a white Kia with a blacked-out windshield.

“When I saw the footage of that, it gave me goosebumps because it was the same guys,” Avetyan said. “They had the same backpacks, and they had the same getaway car.”

On Sunday night in Beverly Grove, three masked suspects connected to a white Kia tried to break into a home on Oakwood Avenue, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. Officers said a nanny and two small children were at home during the attempted break-in, but the home’s security system scared the suspects away before they could take anything.

Avetyan said she is ready to move. She hopes someone recognizes the car and the suspects are caught before another family becomes a target.

“At this point, it’s not even about catching them and getting my stuff back. I’ve kind of lost hope in that,” she said. “It’s the fact of doing something that will take us one step closer to catching them.”

LAPD detectives said they have not made a connection between the burglaries.

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Miami-Dade police officers sue Matt Damon, Ben Affleck production company over ‘The Rip’

By Phil Tenser

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    NEEDHAM, Massachusetts (WCVB) — Two police officers in Miami filed a lawsuit last week, accusing a production company founded by Massachusetts natives Matt Damon and Ben Affleck of defamation in the new Netflix movie “The Rip.”

The plaintiffs argue that the film was promoted as being “inspired by true events” while “portraying identifiable members of Plaintiffs’ narcotics team as corrupt, criminal, and professionally unethical.”

Artists Equity and Falco Pictures are defendants in the lawsuit. Artists Equity is the production company created by Damon and Affleck, childhood friends who grew up together in Massachusetts.

According to the complaint, Sgt. Jason Smith believes he was represented in the film by Damon’s character, Lt. Dane Dumars, and Detective Jonathan Santana believes he was portrayed by Affleck’s character, Detective Sgt. J.D. Byrne. Smith supervised the June 29, 2016, seizure that inspired the film, and Santana executed it for the Miami-Dade Police Department.

“Apart from the fact that a large seizure occurred, the events portrayed in the Film did not happen,” the lawsuit states.

Smith and Santana argue that while the film used fictionalized names, it positively identified the Miami-Dade Police Department, a unique investigative team, the location of the seizure and the details about the drug money being found in orange buckets hidden in the walls.

“Since September 2025, with the release and widespread dissemination of the trailer and promotional materials for The Rip, along with the release of the Film, third parties have approached Plaintiffs asking which character they were and how many buckets they kept,” the complaint states.

Claims in the lawsuit say the production relied on information from Miami-Dade police Capt. Christopher Casiano, whom the plaintiffs allege was not involved in the original investigation. The filing states Damon and Affleck publicly discussed preparing for their roles authentically and credited Casiano in interviews connected to the movie.

Attorneys representing Falco Pictures and Artists Equity denied the allegations in a March response letter included with the complaint. The response argued the film used fictional names, settings and storylines and said the movie’s disclaimer made clear the story was dramatized and not intended to portray real people.

“As the disclaimer in the film’s credits explains: ‘This program is inspired by real events; however, the characters and events depicted have been fictionalized for dramatic purposes, and any similarity to actual persons is purely coincidental and unintentional,'” the response letter states.

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A bus carries the untold story of Colorado’s Native peoples; “We’re still here”

By Anna Alejo

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    COLORADO (KCNC) — As Colorado marks 150 years of statehood, a one-of-a-kind traveling exhibit is hitting the road, and it’s carrying a history many Coloradans have never heard.

The “Breathing, Healing Bus” will wind through communities across the state. It’s part rolling classroom, part memorial and part celebration. Inside, the true story of Indigenous people in Colorado is told in vivid detail — from massacre to resilience, from erasure to a powerful declaration: “We are still here.”

Terri Bissonette, lead facilitator for Wakaska Yuza Native Youth Leaders, says that message is long overdue.

“We knew it would be really important for folks to learn the true history of what happened to tribal nations as Colorado was becoming a state,” she says. “Native history is Colorado history. And it’s important for all Coloradans to know and understand — not only what occurred in the 1800s — but the ongoing battles and struggles and challenges that we have.”

The history on board is sobering. The early leaders of the state, Bissonette says, had an intentional goal: to make Colorado Native American-free. They came close. And for generations, that story was buried, she says.

The Cheyenne and Arapaho peoples are still carrying the weight of that era. The massacre of their ancestors, Bissonette says, is a wound that has never fully healed.

“When trauma is not resolved, it just perpetuates, and it manifests itself in different ways. And that’s really what we see,” said Bissonette.

But the bus isn’t only about pain. A section on board is dedicated to healing, meditative breathing, reflection, and hope. Bissonette is clear about what she wants visitors to walk away feeling.

“We don’t want anybody going through the exhibit triggered or re-traumatized. We want folks to feel inspired. Truth and healing can exist in the same space,” she said.

The voices telling that story belong, in part, to Native youth.

Brielle Patillo, a student from the Northern Arapaho Nation, joined the project with a purpose.

“What inspired me to do this is to just be able to speak up for the people that can’t speak up,” said Patillo. “How we’re getting murdered, and nobody notices it, nobody recognizes it.”

She’s talking about Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women — a crisis her community lives with every day. Cases dropped. Families waiting. Women are forgotten.

But Brielle carries pride alongside that pain. She recently learned that her great-grandmother wrote the dictionary for the Arapaho language.

“I think we should keep on teaching young people about our languages and just keep our traditions. I don’t want my culture to just be forgotten,” said Patillo.

Her fellow student December White Plume points to the images on the bus — the buffalo, the memorials, the red handprints representing missing women.

White Plume said, “They tried to kill us off, but we’re still here. They tried to kill all of our buffalo, but our buffalo are still here.”

Elizabeth Tafoya, who is Jicarilla Apache and Laguna Pueblo, sees the bus as living proof of something powerful.

“We aren’t a dying people,” Tayoya said. “We are still keeping on our legacy. And we can see this through a lot of our youth today.”

That’s ultimately what Terri Bissonette hopes every Coloradan takes with them when they step off the bus. Not guilt, not grief, but understanding. And maybe a little surprise.

“I can’t tell you how many people I’ve run across in the state of Colorado who say, ‘There are Native people here?'” Bissonette said.

There are. They always have been.

And now, on a bus rolling across the state their ancestors called home long before it had a name, they are making sure you know it.

The Wakaska Yuza Native Youth Leaders project received a grant for the traveling exhibit from the America 250-Colorado 150 Commission. Learn more at controlgroupproductions.org/truth-250-150 and at nativeyouthleaders.org.

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Antisemitic graffiti spray-painted on Lisbon 9/11 memorial

By Kendall Keys

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    SUSSEX, Wisconsin (WISN) — The Waukesha County Sheriff’s Office is searching for the vandal responsible for defacing a Sept. 11 memorial in the village of Lisbon.

Crews worked Monday to remove the images of antisemitism.

“We are, you know, a hard-working, blue-collar village. And so when you see that, I think everybody kind of gets a little jolt in their heartstrings,” Village Administrator Daniel Green said. “It just hurts to, to read it and see something like that. The first thing you want to do is find the person who did it and have it removed immediately.”

Someone spray-painted swastikas on the memorial and references to the Bible on the village hall building.

“The memorial was the worst part,” Green said. “The building we can clean up, or we can rebuild. But a memorial like this, many people donated money and funds for this to happen. And it’s close to a lot of people.”

Each year on Sept. 11, people gather at the memorial. In 2021, WISN 12 News spoke to the Lisbon Fire Department lieutenant who wanted to build a tribute to those killed in the attack in the small Waukesha County village.

“Everybody pitched in. An idea that started out in my mind as a small display in the wall of the firehouse turned into this wonderful display here at the community park,” Meyer said in 2021.

The memorial’s meaning made cleaning it up even more important. Crews used a special chemical agent to power wash the spray paint off of a real steel beam from the twin towers, being careful to preserve the piece of history.

“The highway guys did a great job cleaning this up,” Green said. “Hopefully we don’t have to hear about something like this happening for a long time.”

The Waukesha County Sheriff’s Office is investigating. Nobody has been arrested.

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Residents worry about impacts after Fort Smith chemical spill kills fish downstream

By Brett Rains

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    POCOLA, Oklahoma (KHBS, KHOG) — Concern is growing in Pocola, Oklahoma, after thousands of gallons of chemicals spilled in Fort Smith and flowed downstream, raising questions about long-term environmental impacts.

Emergency managers said the spill happened Saturday, May 2, when a holding tank ruptured at the C&S Chemicals facility on Highway 271 in Fort Smith. Approximately 89,000 gallons of chemicals were released into the environment, primarily acidified aluminum sulfate — commonly used to disinfect poultry houses — along with nearly 3,000 gallons of sulfuric acid, according to the Environmental Protection Agency and Arkansas Division of Environmental Quality.

Most of the chemicals entered storm drains and flowed into a nearby drainage ditch, moving downstream toward Oklahoma. Crews are working to neutralize the waterway by reducing acidity levels.

The drainage creek runs from Fort Smith to the Poteau River. An Arkansas Game and Fish spokesperson said crews have counted more than 300 dead minnows and sunfish so far, but residents across the state line say they’ve seen far more.

“There are thousands of fish dead in this creek,” said Jerry Vaughn, who lives along Highway 112 near the contaminated drainage creek. “My children, my grandchildren, fished in this creek for 15 years or 16 years. Lots of fish, and they’re dead. They’re just dead.”

Vaughn lives next to the creek where crews are currently testing and aerating the water after the spill. He said he’s especially worried about what happens as the water flows into a swamp before reaching the Poteau River — and what that could mean for his beehives.

“From here, this creek goes into a huge swamp before it gets into the Poteau River,” Vaughn said. “I have 14 beehives. Those bees work that swamp. And from the research I’ve done, that aluminum sulfate gets into my bees. It’s going to kill my hives.”

Remediation efforts are expected to take two to four weeks, according to emergency managers. Vaughn said he fears the impacts could last much longer.

“I don’t think I’m being told everything,” Vaughn said. “The problem is the aluminum sulfate. It’s not going away. It’s going to be a long-term problem. I’m afraid that long-term problem is just going to be my problem instead of the people that dumped this into the creek.”

In an email sent to 40/29 News, an EPA spokesperson said the Arkansas Division of Environmental Quality, with assistance from Oklahoma, is now the lead agency monitoring the cleanup. C&S Chemicals is responsible for all cleanup costs, and a company spokesperson said the total cost is still being determined.

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Woman seeking comfort finds rare diamond at Arkansas’ Crater of Diamonds State Park

By Adam Roberts, DMM

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    MURFREESBORO, Arkansas (KHBS, KHOG) — A woman mourning her son and her father discovered a 3.09-carat white diamond at Arkansas’ Crater of Diamonds State Park last month, according to a news release from Arkansas State Parks.

Keshia Smith lives in Pennsylvania, but had been planning to visit the park for a year. After the deaths of her son and her father, the trip became a way to look for comfort in the world.

Smith’s boyfriend and brother went with her on a road trip to the park in Murfreesboro. They enjoyed digging on the first day, but on day two, Smith found something shiny in her shovel.

At first, she was skeptical that she had actually fulfilled her dream of finding a diamond. But people urged her to get it checked out by park staff.

“Realizing she might have found her own diamond, Smith was overcome with joy and started crying, laughing, and hugging everyone around her,” the news release stated.

Smith’s gem resembles a heart.

“I really needed this. I really prayed for this, and I just can’t believe it actually happened!” she told park staff, according to the release.

She named the diamond the ‘Za’Novia Liberty Diamond’. Za’Novia stands for the names of her two grandchildren. Liberty is a nod towards the country’s 250th anniversary this year.

This is the second-largest diamond found at the park in 2026 so far.

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‘They’re ruining it for everybody’: Bishop Ward parent frustrated after vandalism, postponed graduation

By Eric Graves

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    KANSAS CITY, Kansas (KMBC) — Bishop Ward High School seniors will not walk across the graduation stage Tuesday evening as scheduled after a recent act of vandalism.

School leadership postponed the commencement ceremonies after seniors reportedly damaged the school building.

In a message to parents, Bishop Ward leadership said the vandalism happened the night of Thursday, May 7, and involved a “significant portion” of the senior class.

Bishop Ward parent Alexcia Gonzales said Thursday was the last day of school for seniors.

Gonzales said she called the school Friday. An administrator told her the vandals destroyed classrooms, damaged furniture, threw eggs and ripped textbooks.

“I don’t understand,” Gonzales said. “What would you think is funny about destroying a classroom? That’s not funny. Like, that’s not even considered a prank.”

Gonzales said her son, Emilio Duran, was out hand-delivering graduation announcements to family and friends Thursday evening.

“He’s been through a lot,” Gonzales said. “And he’s worked really hard. And for it to end like this, it’s just very upsetting.”

In a statement, Bishop Ward High School leaders said commencement ceremonies would be rescheduled when the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department investigation into the vandalism concluded.

Gonzales said it’s frustrating for her son and other uninvolved seniors to be punished for the actions of their classmates.

“All the students weren’t involved, but they’re punishing everybody,” she said. “I know it’s to teach everybody a lesson, but still, it’s not right. It’s not right.”

With that graduation date up in the air, Gonzales has had to change plans quickly. Her son’s grandparents were supposed to come into town, and they had booked an Airbnb.

“Luckily, we were able to get a refund, but I had to let everybody know there’s no ceremony,” she said. “That was hard.”

Gonzales is hoping Bishop Ward will reschedule graduation, but she’s worried because she doesn’t know how long the investigation will take.

She’s hoping the parents of the students involved will help speed up the process.

“I hope if they know that their student did it, that they will make their student come forward because they’re ruining it for everybody,” Gonzales said. “I know if my son was involved, oh, best believe I would take him to the police station.”

In a statement, KCKPD said officers were called to the school before 8 a.m. on Friday, May 8, for a reported burglary.

“The initial investigation indicates that multiple persons, potentially students, gained access to the school building after hours on May 7 and vandalized several interior areas, causing damage to property. The identity of those involved and total value of damaged property is currently undetermined.”

Once KCKPD finishes up the investigation, Bishop Ward High School leadership will decide on any disciplinary actions and whether they would like to pursue charges.

Gonzales said she’s keeping a close eye on her email, hoping to see details on a rescheduled graduation date.

If not, she’s planning to give her son his own ceremony at his graduation party.

“I said, ‘Hey, if you don’t have a ceremony before this party, we will make one for you,'” Gonzales said. “We’ll do the whole thing. We’ll play the song, make you wear your cap and gown. We’ll put a red carpet down. You can walk across and act like you’re getting the diploma.”

But she and her son are both hoping for the real thing.

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