Charges filed against woman accused in Claudell Lane stabbing

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A woman accused of stabbing another woman early Friday has been arrested and charged.

Nakia Bonaparte, 27, of Columbia, was charged on Friday afternoon in Boone County with second-degree assault and armed criminal action. She is being held at the Boone County Jail without bond. A court date has not been scheduled.

The probable cause statement says multiple witnesses and the victim claimed Bonaparte stabbed a woman near the intersection of Claudell Lane and Worley Street after a fight occurred. Police wrote that the victim had cuts seen to her chest and arm.

Both witnesses allegedly saw Bonaparte then run to a vehicle the victim sat in after the stabbing and saw Bonaparte stab the tires of the vehicle before she left, court documents say.

Bonaparte allegedly told police that she went to Claudell Lane to fight one of the witnesses, but the victim had joined in, court documents allege. Bonaparte told police she pulled out the knife and swung it in self-defense, court documents say.

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Area group holds grand opening for new teen center in Columbia

Erika McGuire

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

P.E.A.C.E and H.O.P.E held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Monday for its new Teen Center.

The new center is located at 203 N. Providence Road in Columbia and aims to help at-risk youth. The nonprofits created the space to offer access to mentorship, educational support, life skills development, and programming focused on personal growth and leadership.

The center offers games, food, learning and activities areas and more.

Destiny of Hope Director Lonnie Lockhart Bey started his “boots on the ground” approach of helping at-risk youth in 2021.

Two years later the group received $320,000 in ARPA funding from the $25.5 million the City of Columbia received, with a agreement with the city that ends in 2027, according to previous reporting.

He says it has been a journey getting to the grand opening of the center.

“Ups and downs just trying to figure out how to put things in perspective,” Lockhart Bey said, “When you come out of prison after doing 26 years, it’s not much trust on the parts of those who are in positions to be able to help you to the next level.”

Lockhart Bey says Monday’s grand opening is about “breaking the cycle” with youth.

“We got to break that cycle of poverty mentally and emotionally, because with poverty comes trouble because now there’s anger there’s all these other things that’s occurring within this one body and combustion can simply be I’m going to do what I got to do,” he said.

In total the organization received $428,333.33 through the city ARPA funds and spent $335,057.29 as of January.

Lockhart Bey said the center also received grants from Boone County and donors and the center is on track to spend the amount given by the end of year. He said to run the center it will cost about $300,000 annually.

Community violence was one of five priorities for the city to address using American Rescue Plan Act funding. Other priorities included homelessness, behavioral crisis care, mental health services and workforce development.

The grand opening comes at a time where the Missouri State Highway Patrol reports crime among youth is down.

In 2025, MSHP reported gun crimes involving youth 10-17 years old was 33, which marks a drop compared to 2024 71 gun crimes involving youth was reported.

MSHP also reported there were 32 victims between 10-17 years old last year, while in 2024 there were 70 victims.

Lockhart Bey said there are several factors that are the driving force in youth violence.

“It’s hard to pinpoint one thing. There are a lot of factors and for me what I’ve come to understand that every child I talk to that’s up in age whether they are affiliated, whether they’re just out in the street trying to get money, everybody chasing the bag,” Lockhart Bey said. “So socieconomic, impoverishment is a key factor in why crime is so prevalent,”

The center will be open daily from 8 a.m.-7 p.m.

Those looking to become a part of the program can apply online.

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Montpelier Idaho Temple open house announced

Par Kermani

MONTPELIER, Idaho (KIFI)— An open house has been set for the Montpelier, Idaho, Temple beginning Thursday, Sept. 10, and a dedication is scheduled for Sunday, Oct. 18.

The Church Of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints announced the timeline with public tours being held from Sept. 10 through Saturday, Sept. 26 not including Sundays.

A dedication will be held Sunday, Oct 18 at 10 a.m with a rebroadcast at 2 p.m. According to the press release “the session will be broadcast to all units in the Montpelier Idaho Temple district.”

The temple will be the eighth in the state, joining temples in Boise, Burley, Idaho Falls, Meridian, Pocatello, Rexburg, and Twin Falls.

With 482,000 Latter-Day Saints in the state of Idaho, additional temples are also planned according to officials.

The Teton River Idaho Temple in Rexburg is currently under construction, while temples in Caldwell and Coeur d’Alene have been announced.

Church officials say temples differ from meetinghouses, where weekly worship services are held. Temples are considered houses of the Lord, where sacred religious ceremonies take place.

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Locals in Westmorland attend Cinco de Mayo Lowrider Car Show

Jessamyn Dodd

WESTMORLAND, Calif. (KYMA) – Classic chrome, clean engines and community pride were on display in Westmorland over the weekend for the Cinco de Mayo Lowrider Car Show.

From lowriders to vintage trucks and classic cruisers, car enthusiasts lined up to show off their custom builds, candy paint and restorations.

However, it was more than just horsepower as vendors were selling art, clothing and merchandise celebrating Mexican pride while food and music kept the party going.

For many, it was more than the cars. It was about showing up and showing out, and keeping the culture alive.

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Police use Taser to arrest man accused in Jefferson City road-rage incident

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Police had to use a stun gun on man who allegedly pointed a gun at someone on Saturday during a road-rage incident in Jefferson City, court documents say.

Robert Wallace, 44, of Jefferson City, is charged in Cole County with unlawful use of a weapon, armed criminal action and fourth-degree assault, a misdemeanor. He is being held at the Cole County Jail without bond.

An arraignment was held on Monday and Wallace appeared by video from the jail, where he pleaded not guilty. He intends to apply for a public defender, according to court filings. A counsel status hearing is scheduled for 2 p.m. Wednesday.

The probable cause statement says the victim told police that Wallace cut him off while driving. The two allegedly parked their vehicles in the middle of the road and started arguing with each other outside of their vehicles, the statement says. The victim allegedly started leaving and Wallace followed him before pulling up alongside him and pointing a gun at the victim, the statement says.

Police eventually found Wallace in Cole County and claimed he resisted arrest. Law enforcement used a Taser to subdue and detain the man, court documents allege.

Wallace allegedly told police that the victim drove “erratically” and threatened him, but changed his story when law enforcement told him they had video of the interaction, court documents say. He allegedly told police that he did not pulled a gun and was reaching for his dog, court documents say.

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Arrest made in Rice Road stabbing

Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

An arrest was made in connection with a stabbing that occurred Monday in the 4500 block of Rice Road.

The Columbia Police Department wrote in a Monday afternoon social media post that it arrested Dariell Deshell Smith, 33, of Columbia, on suspicion of first-degree domestic assault and armed criminal action.

Smith was not listed on the Boone County Jail roster on Monday afternoon and charges were not yet listed on Casenet.

Police were called around 2:40 a.m. Monday and found the victim with minor injuries. They were brought to Boone Hospital and are stable, the social media post says.

An ABC 17 News videographer at the scene saw around 10 Columbia Police Department officers investigating near a home, previous reporting indicates.

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Columbia City Council tables vote on whether to put public safety sales tax on August ballot

Mitchell Kaminski

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ) 

The Columbia City Council voted 4-3 on Monday night to table a decision that would have put a proposed 1% sales tax dedicated to public safety on the August ballot.

City staff has written an ordinance that would add a 1% general sales tax, with the revenue generated going solely to the Columbia Police Department and Columbia Fire Department. 

The goal of the ordinance is to help both departments increase staffing, cover facility upgrades, and buy new equipment. Specific priorities listed by the city under the proposed sales tax include: 

Increase CPD staffing to 50 officers over four years

Increase CFD staffing to 40 firefighters over four years

Build a new Police Facility

Purchase new police vehicles and equipment 

Build two new fire stations with apparatus 

Renovate three current fire stations

Develop a police and fire technology plan

Maintain competitive wages 

According to Monday’s council memo, the city estimates that the 1% sales and use tax dedicated to public safety will produce $38 million in revenue.  However, the ordinance needs voter approval during the 2026 August primary elections in order to go into effect. 

The city council must approve the ordinance as written during it’s march 18th meeting in order to get in on the August ballot. If the City Council approves the ordinance as written, this question would appear on the ballot: 

“Shall the municipality of Columbia, Missouri impose an additional citywide sales tax at a rate of one percent, solely for the purpose of providing revenues to improve public safety for the city, which shall be limited to expenditures on equipment, salaries and benefits, and facilities for police and fire departments?”

The current sales tax rate for Columbia sits at nearly 8% (7.975%), with 4.2% coming from the state, 2% from the city, and 1.75% from Boone County. The 2% from the City of Columbia currently includes a 1% general sales tax, 0.5% transportation sales tax, 0.25% capital improvement sales tax and 0.25% park sales tax.

Boone County sheriff seeks similar ballot issue

A Monday press release from the Boone County auditor shows that Sheriff Dwayne Carey has also asked the Boone County Commission to consider putting a law enforcement sales tax increase on the August 2026 ballot.

“Dedicated sales tax revenue no longer keeps pace with the broader cost of public safety services across county government,” Auditor Kyle Rieman said. “Those pressures include the sheriff’s office, jail operations, the rising cost of housing inmates outside Boone County, juvenile services, prosecuting attorney, circuit courts and other related expenses — and the same squeeze is showing up in nearly every other county cost center.”

Boone County currently collects a 1/8-cent sales tax for law enforcement that brought in $5.76M in revenue in 2025, according to the release from the auditor.

The auditor’s release also acknowledges possible tax cuts, specifically to income tax by the state that could be placed on ballot as early as August.

“Rieman said that proposal is best understood not as a tax cut but as a tax shift, replacing a tax based on income with higher sales taxes everyone pays at the register,” the release says. “Rieman is asking city and county leadership to coordinate on timing, ballot language and the total cumulative burden on taxpayers, ideally placing any to take a coordinated approach to work together to consider responsible timing, ballot language, public messaging and the total burden on taxpayers.”

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Supreme Court temporarily restores ability to receive abortion drug mifepristone by mail

CNN

Originally Published: 04 MAY 26 11:00 ET

Updated: 04 MAY 26 12:22 ET

By John Fritze, CNN

(CNN) — The Supreme Court temporarily restored telehealth and mail access to the abortion pill mifepristone on Monday, responding to an emergency appeal that warned of potential chaos for patients who had appointments to access the drug.

The “administrative stay” is far from a final decision but rather maintains the status quo for a few days while the court reviews emergency appeals filed Saturday by the drug’s manufacturer and the maker of a generic version. The order puts on hold a decision from the conservative 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals that reinstated a nationwide requirement that the medication be obtained in person, undermining access to the method of abortion that has grown more widespread since the court overturned Roe v. Wade.

Justice Samuel Alito’s order staying the 5th Circuit ruling lasts through May 11, and Alito requested a response in the cases by Thursday.

Danco Laboratories, the maker of mifepristone, told the Supreme Court in its appeal that the 5th Circuit order “injects immediate confusion and upheaval into highly time-sensitive medical decisions.” GenBioPro, which makes a generic version of the drug, said in its own appeal that the lower court’s decision risked “abruptly cutting off access for patients nationwide.”

The fast-track case puts the drug and the issue of abortion back on the high court’s docket less than two years after the justices rejected a similar challenge – a decision that allowed the drug to remain widely available. Alito handles emergency appeals rising from the New Orleans-based 5th US Circuit.

Since the Covid-19 pandemic, women have been able to obtain mifepristone – one of the two drugs in the medication abortion regimen – through telehealth appointments. The Biden administration finalized rules that ended the requirement that the pills be obtained through an in-person doctor’s visit in 2023, a year after the Supreme Court overturned Roe.

As conservative states have responded to the Supreme Court’s decision by banning or severely limiting access to clinic abortions, medication abortions have become more common. Medication abortions accounted for more than 60% of abortions in the US in 2023, according to Guttmacher Institute research.

A CNN analysis of mifepristone data shows that the drug is overwhelmingly safe and has fewer reported side effects than Viagra or penicillin.

Louisiana sued last year alleging that the Biden-era regulation undermined its own abortion ban. A federal district court in April declined to restrict access to the drug until the Food and Drug Administration completed a safety review of the medication.

“Big abortion pharma claims they need an emergency stay because they will lose massive amounts of money if they can’t kill more babies quickly and efficiently by mail without medical oversight,” Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said in a statement Monday. “The administrative stay is temporary, and I am confident life and the law will win in the end.”

The Supreme Court reviewed the issue once before, in 2024, and it unanimously rejected a lawsuit challenging the FDA’s regulation. But the court resolved that dispute by concluding that the doctors and anti-abortion groups that had challenged access to the drug did not have standing to sue. That technical, narrow decision meant that future challenges were almost guaranteed to reach the justices again.

CNN’s Tierney Sneed contributed to this report.

This story has been updated with additional details.

The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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YCNF hosts 2026 Nurses Gala

Dillon Fuhrman

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – The Yuma County Nurses Foundation (YCNF) hosted the 2026 Nurses Gala over the weekend.

According to a press release, the gala, which was in collaboration with Onvida Health and other community partners, took place at the Quechan Casino Resort Saturday from 6 p.m. to midnight.

Courtesy: Yuma County Nurses Foundation

Courtesy: Yuma County Nurses Foundation

The event, according to YCNF, kicks off National Nurses Week, taking place from May 6 through May 12, as well as celebrate the nurses of Yuma County.

During the event, there was a dinner, dancing and an awards presentation, where over 60 nominees were recognized across three of the following categories:

Excellence in Nursing Mentorship

Excellence in Nursing Leadership

Clinical Nurse Excellence

Courtesy: Yuma County Nurses Foundation

Courtesy: Yuma County Nurses Foundation

Courtesy: Yuma County Nurses Foundation

In addition, the winners of the three categories are the following:

Excellence in Nursing Mentorship: Ha’ani Patchen BSN, RN Workforce Development Educator at Onvida Health

Excellence in Nursing Leadership: Kristin Parra MBA, BSN, RN, CRRN, Chief Executive Officer, Yuma Rehabilitation Hospital

Clinical Nurse Excellence: Briana D. Smith DNP, FNP-C, Lead Advanced Practice Provider of Specialty Services at Onvida Health

Courtesy: Yuma County Nurses Foundation

Courtesy: Yuma County Nurses Foundation

To learn more about the gala, read the press release below.

YCNF Press ReleaseDownload

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Child found alone in Rexburg reunited with family

Par Kermani

Rexburg, Idaho (KIFI) — Rexburg City police found a child alone at a local apartment complex and have safely reunited her with her family.

According to the Rexburg City Facebook page, officers found the child around 10 a.m. at the Mesa Falls Apartments. Initially, the department was unable to identify her or find her parents.

However, after asking the community for tips in a social media post, the department confirmed the child has been located and reunited with her family.

The department also thanked the public for helping assist in the search.

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