Mizzou football player arrested, charged with felony after short chase on East Broadway

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Mizzou football player was booked into the Boone County Jail early Tuesday and was charged with a felony.

Jaden Jacobi Bush, 18, of Theodore, Alabama, was charged on Thursday with aggravated fleeing and misdemeanor reckless driving. He was booked into the Boone County Jail at 12:47 a.m. Tuesday. A sheriff’s office spokesman said Bush bonded out at 8:40 a.m. A hearing has not been scheduled.

The probable cause statement says a Columbia police officer saw a white 2024 Ford Mustang speeding near East Broadway and Old Highway 63 on Monday night. Bush turned west onto East Broadway and the officer turned on his lights for a traffic stop, but Bush kept driving for 24 seconds, the officer wrote in the statement.

Bush had 19-year-old passenger in his vehicle when he was stopped at East Broadway and Old Highway 63 south, the statement says.

Bush allegedly told the officer that he was driving 80-90 miles per hour and that he did not initially pull over because “that’s just how my car is,” he was quoted in the probable cause statement.

The Mizzou Athletic Department confirmed in an email to ABC 17 News that Bush was suspended from the football program indefinitely.

“We are disappointed in JJ’s actions. He is indefinitely suspended from the team as the legal process plays out,” a statement from head coach Eli Drinkwitz says.

Bush is listed on the Mizzou football website as a freshman linebacker.

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Boone County Sheriff asks commission to consider adding sales tax to ballot

Marie Moyer

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Boone County Commission is considering adding a sales tax increase to the future ballot, even as county residents might have to vote on tax measures from both the state and the City of Columbia.

Boone County Sheriff Dwayne Carey brought the increase to the Boone County Commission to help fund the construction of a new Boone County Jail.

“The Sheriff recognizes the need to get ahead of our detainee housing issues,” Capt. Brian Leer of the Boone County Sheriff’s Office said. “As you know, the cost for housing detainees out of county has grown drastically over the last few years, and we think this problem is only going to continue to grow.”

Leer said the office has 392 detainees, and 210 of those are in out-of-county facilities. The office is paying for more than 190 detainees to be housed in other county jails. He said the cost to house out-of-county detainees from January to March this year was around $1.12 million.

Carey has not yet brought a formal proposal for a tax increase to the Boone County Commission. However, Boone County Presiding Commissioner Kip Kendrick told ABC 17 News they anticipate a request to be made within the next month.

The City of Columbia recently tabled a 1% sales tax for public safety during a City Council meeting on Monday. If approved, the proposal would be on the August ballot. All revenue from the tax would go to the Columbia Police and Fire departments. Improvements include staffing several dozen staff for both departments and adding new vehicles. CPD would also like a new headquarters.

This may also cause additional strain on the Boone County Jail if passed.

“Any time that the city of Columbia police makes arrests, that’s going to lead to potentially additional prosecutions, additional people within the jail and there’s potentially different, additional court dates,” Boone County Auditor Kyle Rieman said. “It all kind of has a downstream effect and impact on each other.”

In a news release on Monday, Rieman acknowledged the need for additional public safety funding while also highlighting the rising costs Boone County is facing across the board.

“Tariffs, increased gas prices and growing demand of a tech sector that’s definitely been a growing cost across county governments,” Rieman said.

The release alluded to the general increased cost of living due to tariffs and inflation, as well as Republican Gov. Mike Kehoe’s initiative to eliminate income tax.

“As the state and federal governments continue to cut their own tax bases, the programs that support local governments are often the first on the chopping block,” Rieman, a Democrat, said. “Costs are rising faster than dedicated revenue across virtually every part of county government. Affordability is a growing concern, for the city, for the county, and most of all the citizens of Boone County.”

Rieman adds that local departments have also needed to rethink funds due to changes to state funding.

“The state or the fed, they would give assistance through grants, now they are no longer providing those or may not be providing those,” Rieman said. “we’re having to make the decision on whether or not to backfill that with other resources or discontinue providing those services.”

Rieman wrote that, if approved by both the Columbia City Council and Boone County Commission, coordinating when those tax measures will appear on the ballot is key.

“The city and county serve many of the same people, and those people are already feeling fiscally squeezed,” Rieman wrote. “We shouldn’t be sending the voters of our community mixed messages or competing requests in a vacuum from what the state is asking. At a time when trust in government is at historic lows, local leaders owe voters a clear, coordinated plan that takes affordability seriously and a ballot they can understand.”

Kendrick said the Commission has been in communication with the City of Columbia and that talks with city officials and Carey are ongoing.

“We’re going to work over the next few weeks to try and continue to see what the potential impact will be to help inform the county commission as they consider whether or not to put this forth to the voters,” Rieman said.

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Camdenton Board of Aldermen puts pause on data centers

Ryan Shiner

CAMDENTON, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Camdenton Board of Aldermen unanimously passed a one-year moratorium on the approval of data centers within its city limits.

Aldermen met on Tuesday to consider the pause on the permits, approval and construction. Columbia is also considering a similar one-year ban.

Meeting documents say the city’s code of ordinances “does not adequately address the unique land use, infrastructure, and utility demands associated with data centers” and brings up concerns around electricity and water usage.

“Data centers are high-intensity users of electricity and water resources and may significantly impact municipal infrastructure, including electric systems, water supply, wastewater systems, land use compatibility, and emergency services,” meeting documents say.

Only 70 people were allowed within the council chambers for fire safety and occupancy reasons, but residents were unified in their support against data centers in the community.

The building and inclusion of data centers have been highly contested around the country, including in Mid-Missouri.

“I have heard a lot of negative things about data centers and have yet to hear very much positive about them,” Camdenton Mayor John McNabb said. “I’m very concerned about that because it’s, it’s our community.

Amazon has sought to build a data center in Montgomery County and saw intense pushback from its residents at several public meetings, which culminated in a lawsuit to attempt to block it from happening. Critics of data centers typically point to excess water usage and increased use of electricity.

Tuesday’s meeting documents say there are concerns about “infrastructure capacity” and say data centers require “extraordinary utility demand.”

“The City’s water and wastewater systems and the electric system for the area are designed for typical residential, commercial, and light industrial uses and have not been evaluated for high-density, continuous-load facilities such as data centers,” the moratorium reads.

Earlier in the meeting, the board also unanimously passed a resolution that rescinds its support for the MO Lake Development project.

The Board of Aldermen has been in talks with the developers of the land in question since the summer of 2021. McNabb said that the plans for this development have changed at least six times since 2022. The developers do not own the property.

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Family forced to wait as court error postpones murder sentencing

Fox13

Originally Published: 05 MAY 26 15:20 ET

By Mythili Gubbi

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    OGDEN, Utah (KSTU) — A family thought they could close a tragic chapter of their life on Monday when the woman accused of murdering their loved one was supposed to be sentenced. But a mix-up in court led to the family having to wait a little longer for justice.

“Anything that a son-in-law could ask for, really, she was a protector, she was always there for me whenever I needed her,” described Shiloh Alires about his mother-in-law, Nakeena Youngman. “She was the mom I never had and I wished for.”

Youngman was a beloved mother, aunt, grandma, cousin and friend.

In April 2025, she was found with a gunshot wound on 800 North in Ogden. She died at the hospital. Since then, her family has been trying to cope with her loss.

“We’re hoping today we could get it so it could ease up the little ones a little bit more,” Alires added. “Now it’s just a lot harder.”

Ana Maria Zaragoza, 38, was scheduled to be sentenced for Youngman’s murder on Monday. She pleaded guilty to murder in March of this year and had charges dropped for weapon possession and obstruction of justice.

But after loved ones were already in the courthouse, the procedures were postponed because Zaragoza was not transported from jail.

“We apologize for not being able to proceed,” Judge Craig Hall said. “We just can’t proceed without the defendant being here.”

Stephanie Wilkinson is a longtime friend of the family.

“I used to babysit Nakeena, anytime mom went somewhere, I was the older kid,” Wilkinson recalled. “A lot of laughs and ups and downs throughout, but she was a beautiful, beautiful person.”

She said having to leave the courtroom on Monday without the sentencing was tough.

“The family has had to emotionally and mentally prepare for this. We have been preparing for this for 13 months, but really for two months, just waiting for the sentencing to be today,” she said. “We have taken off work, we have redone our whole schedules, but to listen to the children cry knowing this day was supposed to sort of be the end and it is not because they failed to get her to the courthouse is absolutely unacceptable.”

Zaragoza is currently being held at the Davis County Jail. FOX 13 News spoke to the Davis County Sheriff’s Office about why she wasn’t brought to court. An official there said it was the Weber County Sheriff’s Office’s responsibility to transport the defendant since the courthouse is in their jurisdiction. But, they also said that both sheriff’s offices did not get the paperwork from the court notifying them of the hearing, so they did not know they had to transport her.

The sentencing was moved to Friday, May 15, at 1:30 p.m.

“We’re processing throughout the weeks, that we’d have justice and stuff, and today, now, they can’t bring her here,” Alires added.

Through Mother’s Day and over the next 10 days, they will continue to wait for justice.

“Quite bugged, honestly, quite frustrated, quite bugged,” Alires 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.

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Registration Now Open for New Fiesta Dog Parade!

News Channel 3-12

Below is a press release from Old Spanish Days regarding their newest event, the Fiesta Dog Parade on May 16th.

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – A new event has been added to the 2026 Old Spanish Days event calendar placing our furry friends at the forefront of the inaugural Fiesta Dog Parade and Costume Contest in downtown Santa Barbara on Saturday, May 16. Inspired by Old Spanish Days Fiesta, this vibrant new tradition brings together locals, businesses, nonprofits, and pet lovers for a one-of-a-kind event filled with color, creativity, and connection.

The family-friendly parade is organized as a collaboration between Old Spanish Days, the City of Santa Barbara, the Santa Barbara Humane and Paseo Nuevo. The day will be a celebration of Santa Barbara’s culture, community spirit, and love of dogs, according to El Presidente 2026 Colin Hayward.

“The Fiesta Dog Parade for Old Spanish Days 2026 is really about bringing new parts of our community into the Fiesta family,” said El Presidente Hayward whose vision of a Fiesta Dog Parade is just around the corner. “Santa Barbara has an incredible community of dog lovers — people who enjoy costume contests — and folks who simply want to be downtown on State Street enjoying a fun, festive parade. This event brings all of that together.”

With festive costumes, Spanish-inspired flair, and plenty of wagging tails, participants will parade down the 700 and 800 blocks of State Street before making their way through the picturesque Paseo Nuevo Shopping Mall — capturing the warmth, pride, and playful spirit that make Fiesta so special. A fun post-parade gathering, including music, vendors and awards, will take place at the parade’s conclusion in Paseo Nuevo.

To help ensure a safe and enjoyable experience for all participants and attendees, organizers said participation in the Dog Parade is limited and available by advance registration only. Every pre-registered pup will receive a special commemorative Fiesta bandana to celebrate the day. The winners of the 2026 Fiesta Dog Parade Costume Contest will receive prizes from Paseo Nuevo retailers.

“We want to give more people a reason to feel connected to Fiesta in 2026,” added El Presidente Hayward.

To register, and for more information, please visit https://www.sbfiesta.org/fiesta-dog-parade/

Fiesta 2026 runs August 5-9. Additional details at sbfiesta.org.

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‘We always find a way forward’: President of Central Oregon Community College shares state of the college

Claire Elmer

(Update: adding comments from COCC President)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Central Oregon Community College President Dr. Greg Pereira delivered a “State of the College” address Tuesday morning on the Bend campus — highlighting growth, challenges, and the institution’s impact across the region.

Pereira emphasized a central message: despite ongoing challenges, Central Oregon Community College (COCC) continues to move forward and play a vital role in Central Oregon.

“The key takeaway from today’s state of the college is that COCC is an absolutely incredible institution –that, despite challenges that come up, we always find a way forward, and we’re doing incredible work in this community,” Pereira said.

The college serves a 10,000-square-mile area and plays a major role in workforce training and regional development. One out of every 41 jobs in Central Oregon is tied to COCC, which contributes an estimated $349 million annually to the local economy.

With growing demand for career and technical education, COCC is expanding its footprint. Pereira highlighted the recent completion of a 22,000-square-foot expansion at the Madras campus, which will support programs including nursing, medical assisting and early childhood education.

“We’re also doing an incredible expansion of our Redmond campus to really expand our opportunity to provide career and technical education in that region,” he said.

Like many community colleges nationwide, COCC is facing funding challenges. Pereira said the college is working to stay creative and adapt in order to continue delivering quality education.

“Some of the biggest challenges we’re facing are related to funding. So we have to be innovative and we have to think a little bit differently about how to ensure that we continue to provide the best education as possible for our students,” he said.

Affordability remains a key focus. More than half of COCC students receive financial aid, and the COCC Foundation awards about $2.2 million in scholarships each year.

While Tuesday’s address took place in Bend, “State of the College” events are also planned for Redmond and Prineville. Those meetings will focus more specifically on how the college is serving each local community.

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Missouri House passes bill to restrict drone use ahead of World Cup

Matthew Sanders

JEFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

The Missouri House approved a bill on Tuesday that would tighten restrictions on the use of drones ahead of this summer’s World Cup games in Kansas City.

Senate Bill 1421 would add prohibitions on where drones can be flown into state law. Current law states that they can’t be flown over open-air facilities, but the bill would also outlaw flying near critical infrastructure. It also adds bombs and bomb materials as items that are illegal to deliver by drone.

The bill drew debate in the House, where members tacked on dozens of amendments with less than two weeks remaining in the session. The session ends May 15.

The House approved an emergency clause, so the bill would go into effect immediately upon being signed. The bill now goes back to the Senate for that chamber to consider changes made by the House.

Rep. David Tyson Smith (D-Columbia) successfully added an amendment that would allow convicted criminals in certain rehabilitation programs to get a limited driver’s license when they complete those programs

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Fire agencies hold wildfire preparedness event at Cabrillo High School

Dave Alley

VANDENBERG VILLAGE, Calif. (KEYT) – State and local fire agencies held a special event on Tuesday morning at Cabrillo High School to spotlight how responders are gearing up for wildfire season.

The event was called a “Community Wildfire Resilience Showcase” and will include officials from CAL FIRE, Santa Barbara County Fire, as well as state and federal partners.

Aimed as an effort to showcase community wildfire resilience, the gathering was held during the statewide Wildfire Preparedness Week campaign that is currently running from May 3 to May 9.

During the event, those on-hand were able to see real-life examples of how residents can make their homes and communities more fire resilient.

Three other similar events are being held across California this week to discuss wildfire preparedness, including Calabasas, Santa Rosa, and Paradise.

To learn more about more about Wildfire Preparedness Week, as well as general wildfire safety and preparedness, visit www.ReadyForWildfire.org.

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Southern California Non-Profit Expands Therapy Dog Program

Patricia Martellotti

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – Southern California is seeing a growing demand for therapy dogs in schools, hospitals, and first responder support programs, and one local non-profit is preparing for its next wave of trained companions.

VIP Dog Teams is expecting a new litter of puppies in late May, part of its ongoing effort to expand services across Santa Barbara and Ventura counties. The organization is currently recruiting volunteer handlers, with formal training scheduled to begin in late July.

Once trained, the dogs will be placed in community settings including classrooms, medical facilities, and emergency response agencies, where they provide emotional support and stress relief.

Program leaders say the expansion reflects a steady increase in requests from local institutions seeking therapy animal visits, especially in high-stress environments.

This new litter represents the next generation of therapy dogs being prepared to meet those needs, with training focused on temperament, obedience, and adaptability in public settings.

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Houston’s Queens of the Grind Are Back: OWN’s HEART & HUSTLE: HOUSTON Returns Saturday, May 30, 2026

By Francis Page Jr.

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    May 5, 2026 (Houston Style Magazine) — Houston is once again stepping into the national spotlight — and this time, the city’s powerhouse women are bringing even more heat, heart, and hustle. OWN’s breakout reality docuseries HEART & HUSTLE: HOUSTON officially returns for its highly anticipated second season on Saturday, May 30, 2026, at 9:00 PM ET/PT, delivering a fresh chapter packed with emotional revelations, fractured friendships, entrepreneurial triumphs, and unapologetic Houston ambition.

Set against the backdrop of one of America’s most culturally dynamic and fast-growing cities, the series continues to shine a national spotlight on successful Black women navigating business, family, relationships, and sisterhood in Houston, Texas — a city known for producing leaders who don’t just dream big, but live even bigger.

This season, however, the glam comes with growing pains. The once-tight-knit sisterhood between Chloe Cooke, La’Torria Lemon, LeBrina Jackson, Muneera Page, Roe Grady-Pichardo, and Alaina Saulsberry faces its most turbulent chapter yet. Explosive disagreements, emotional betrayals, and shifting alliances leave the women divided into opposing camps as they attempt to rebuild bonds that once felt unbreakable.

But if there’s one thing Houston women know how to do, it’s persevere.

From luxury beauty brands and elite wellness businesses to high-powered public relations firms and Houston nightlife empires, these women continue to redefine what Black excellence looks like in the modern South. Their journeys reflect the very spirit of Houston itself — resilient, evolving, stylish, ambitious, and impossible to ignore.

Among this season’s most compelling storylines is Chloe Cooke’s emotional crossroads as she balances a potentially life-changing engagement with growing questions surrounding her relationship. Meanwhile, public relations powerhouse La’Torria Lemon continues expanding her impact across Houston while processing the heartbreaking loss of her father — a deeply personal journey many viewers will find profoundly relatable.

Fan favorite LeBrina Jackson enters a season of self-discovery after learning some members of the group now view her differently, forcing her to reevaluate loyalty, friendship, and her own identity within the circle.

Content creator and entrepreneur Muneera Page peels back the layers of her picture-perfect life, offering viewers a vulnerable look into marriage, motherhood, and the emotional walls built from generational trauma. Her story promises to be one of the season’s most emotionally powerful arcs.

Houston hospitality leader Roe Grady-Pichardo continues commanding attention both professionally and personally as she attempts to rebuild a healthy co-parenting relationship while confronting unresolved emotions from her past.

And beauty mogul Alaina Saulsberry faces one of life’s most painful transitions — divorce — while rediscovering her strength, clarity, and purpose as a woman determined to rise stronger than ever before.

Produced by the Emmy Award-winning Jesse Collins Entertainment for OWN, the series continues to elevate authentic Black storytelling while positioning Houston as a vibrant hub for culture, entrepreneurship, luxury, and influence.

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.

Kierra Lee
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