El Paso native to publish 13th book, highlights female survivor stories

Rosemary Garcia

EL PASO, Texas  (KVIA) — Author Jennifer Montiel is using her story of overcoming human trafficking, domestic violence and sexual assault to help others facing similar challenges.

The bilingual author has deep roots in the Borderland. She was born in El Paso but moved away at a young age.

She recently visited the Sun City to celebrate the release of her upcoming book titled ‘Strong Women Break Too: Real Life Stories from Women Who Carried Too Much and Steps to Reclaim Yourself.’ The official release date is July 7, 2026.

At just 13 years old, Montiel was sexually assaulted by family members. At 16, Montiel was sold by her father. She would escaped human trafficking but fell into abusive marriages. She described her first three husbands as controlling and aggressive.

Following years of therapy, Montiel is now helping others through the power of storytelling.

“I had to find my voice at a very young age, and that’s how I was able to voice and be an advocate for so many people,” she told ABC-7.

For over a decade, she worked closely with families and victims. Montiel took a break from her career in law enforcement to instead focus on her writing.

“Strong Women Break Too: Real Life Stories from Women Who Carried Too Much and Steps to Reclaim Yourself” features the stories of real women who have faced emotional trauma, exhaustion and healing.

Montiel hopes the novel provides guidance on how women can reclaim self-worth and identity.

Her godmother was featured in this publication. Irene Delgado said seeing her story come to life was surreal.

“I cried. I cried because, like I said, it’s so surreal. It’s like it’s me, but it’s, it’s not me anymore. It was me. It was. That girl was a young woman, you know, 25 years ago. It’s not me anymore. And I never thought I would get to the point where I’m at now. I, honestly, I thought I would die under his hands. I thought I was, you know, I was lost,” she said.

Delgado said her hope is that by sharing her story, others would find hope.

“I regret everything we went through. But seeing that and hoping that somebody will read the story and they will say, ‘You know what? There’s hope for me.’”

In the book, Montiel also shares her own story of overcoming her previous relationships.

“I think we all have a voice. We just need the right resources. I always tell everybody we have to transition. We’re like a butterfly. We’re going to transition and we’re going to become something beautiful. Unfortunately, the the, the whatever happened, it will always be there. But there’s always healing methods. We could heal through it to be able to continue in life,” she said.

The mother of three hopes other women are inspired to seek help.

“That was that’s my goal when I write. How can I help? What difference is it going to make? How is my book going to be different?”

Her new book will be released this July. If you’re interested in checking out her other novels, click here.

If you need of help, the Center Against Sexual and Family Violence has a 24/7 crisis hopeline. Call 915-593-7300.

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Columbia city manager discusses public safety funding options during annual ‘State of the City’ address

Alison Patton

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Columbia City Manager De’Carlon Seewood addressed Columbia residents at the State of the City on Friday.

In the past, the meeting has been a reflection of the past year. In 2025, Seewood spoke about the city’s destroyed recycling facility, potential budget cuts and crime. Details for Friday’s speech were released right before Seewood addressed the city. Here are a few things the ABC 17 News is keeping track of:

The Columbia City Council voted Monday to put a 1% sales tax for public safety on the August ballot. The revenue would go directly to the Columbia Police and Fire Departments, and it would generate an estimated $38 million in revenue.

Both departments would use the funding to keep up with Columbia’s growing population. CPD would hire 50 new officers, and CFD would hire 40 new firefighters.

Seewood mentioned public safety funding, although he didn’t directly speak about the sales tax.

“As we continue to evaluate long-term funding options for public safety, we remain focused on making strategic investments that support our police, fire and supporting services,” Seewood said. “These investments are critical as we respond to increasing service demands in a growing community and work to ensure we are positioned for the future.”

CFD responded to more than 16,800 calls for service in 2025, according to Seewood, a record-breaking number.

During a press conference afterward, Seewood said that if the sales tax isn’t passed both departments would struggle.

“The hard part will be trying to figure out how we have to shift some services in order to provide some access,” Seewood said. “So, it’s really taking a strategic look at what we can and can’t do.” 

If passed, the revenue will start being collected in January.

However, the city’s sales tax might have to go up against a 3/8-cent Boone County sales tax that Sheriff Dwayne Carey asked the county commissioners to put on the ballot.

The relationship between Columbia and the University of Missouri leadership became tense after a Stephen’s College student was shot and killed downtown in September. MU President Mun Choi and Columbia and Boone County leaders have been meeting monthly to discuss safety — these meetings typically happen behind closed doors.

When asked about the relationship between the city and the university, Seewood did not give many details, but he did say the city is collaborating with all of its partners.

“It’s just a conversation about what we’re doing,” he said. “It’s about making sure all of our partners are working collaboratively to solve issues.”

One of the priorities that Choi has been pushing for is increased foot patrol downtown and reviewing crowd control ordinances. The city council passed a median ordinance in February that would limit which roads people can stand on.

CPD has been posting on Facebook about how the median ordinance will work once it goes into law July 1.

Columbia’s housing crisis was another topic Seewood addressed, highlighting some of the projects the city has contributed funds to, like the Columbia Housing Authority’s Kinney Point and Love Columbia’s Gigi’s Place.

“These are the projects that move us forward,” Seewood said. “They do not solve the challenge overnight.”

Seewood also said the city is working to expand housing and focus on long-term needs–a key point from the 2025 city and county homelessness report.

He also said the city is working on a strategic plan to address homelessness that is based on data, community input and how other cities address the challenge. However, details on the plan are limited.

“It reflects a shift from a primarily reactive approach to a more proactive one, focused on connecting individuals to stable housing and reducing repeat interactions with public safety and emergency services,” Seewood said.

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The US Navy lost $136 million worth of jets in an air show crash. Why risk it?

CNN Newsource

By Brad Lendon, CNN

(CNN) — The crash of two US Navy jets at an Idaho air show last weekend is raising questions about why the Pentagon risks multimillion-dollar warplanes – and their crews – for entertainment.

“Those calls are almost always part of the noise surrounding an accident,” said John Venable, a senior resident fellow at the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies and a former US Air Force fighter pilot.

Sunday’s accident during the Gunfighter Skies Air Show at Mountain Home Air Force Base involved two Navy EA-18 Growlers, an electronic warfare aircraft based on the F/A-18 fighter jet platform.

The jets were assigned to Electronic Attack Squadron 129 from Whidbey Island, Washington, and crewed by members of the Growler Airshow Team, according to a Navy statement.

After the two jets collided mid-air, the four air crew ejected successfully, with only one requiring hospital treatment for non-life threatening injuries, the statement said.

Growlers cost around $68 million apiece, according to a 2021 Navy fact sheet, but replacement costs would be much higher. Production of the EA-18 jets has ended, although Boeing still has F/A-18s under construction.

Operating costs for jets in the F/A-18 family run about $20,000 an hour, according to a 2022 Boeing press release.

So why burn through that amount of money while risking multimillion-dollar hardware and the lives of skilled crew simply to delight the crowds?

Feats of daring

The Growler Airshow Team is just a small part of the US military’s lineup of demonstration teams, who perform daring maneuvers at air shows year-round.

The most well-known are the Navy’s Blue Angels and the Air Force’s Thunderbirds, which have headlined dozens of events each year for decades flying with their distinctive liveries.

Annual budgets for each team are not publicly disclosed, and the Pentagon did not provide figures after several CNN requests.

But, according to a 2012 cost-benefit analysis by three Navy officers attending the service’s post-graduate school in California, the Blue Angels budget was about $98.6 million. That amount covered personnel, travel expenses, aircraft and equipment maintenance, operations and support costs.

Congress in 2024 required the Pentagon to perform a new cost-benefit study, but to date the military has not released any public figures.

The 2012 paper found an extremely lopsided cost-benefit balance from the Navy’s Blue Angels team.

For more than $98 million spent on the Blue Angels in a year, the Navy came away with less than $1 million in recruiting benefits, a negative 99% return on investment, the officers concluded.

If “goodwill” – things like the economic benefit of air show spending to nearby communities – the cost-benefit ratio narrows considerably, but still yielded a negative 41% return on investment, the study found.

“The costs outweigh the benefits,” the study said.

The tens of millions spent by the Blue Angels and the Thunderbirds are only part of the Pentagon’s community outreach though.

Venable said the two teams combined can only do around 70 of the 325 to 350 air shows put on in North America every year.

That’s where demonstration units like the Growler team come in.

“Both the Air Force and the Navy really value smaller venues that can’t get a major jet team, which is why teams like the EA-18G Growler Demonstration Team exist,” Venable said.

“The services have created small demonstration teams that, when requested, can serve those communities” that otherwise wouldn’t get to see military flying, he added.

Though the Thunderbirds were on the program for the Mountain Home show, the military will sometimes add smaller demonstration teams like Growlers, if the schedule allows, Venable said.

Uniting communities

No matter if it’s the full-time demonstration teams or smaller teams like the Growlers, air show flying involves risk. The aircraft fly close together – formation flying – and close to the ground while traveling at hundreds of miles an hour.

Deadly accidents have occurred, including the infamous 1982 “Diamond Crash” in Arizona, when four Thunderbirds pilots were killed during a practice flight while rehearsing for their upcoming show season.

In 1994, a B-52 bomber crashed during a practice flight for an air show in Washington state. An investigation concluded the pilot tried unsafe maneuvers not suitable for an eight-engine bomber.

More recently an Air Force major was killed during a practice session in 2018, and in 2016, a Blue Angels pilot was killed in a crash before a show in Tennessee.

Despite the dangers and the numbers shown in the 2012 study, Venable said the military sees the demonstrations as worth the risk.

“Most (people) can’t see or heavily discount the public affairs and recruiting benefits, but both are sizable,” Venable said.

Air shows can draw tens or even hundreds of thousands of spectators on a weekend. That can provide “connective tissue” between the community and the services, and an appreciation of the work military members do, he said.

“The real purpose of a military air show is to give people a sense of the precision and professionalism of the military to people who wouldn’t otherwise have an opportunity to see it and, in a special few, spark the urge to serve,” Venable said.

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

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Las Cruces Border Patrol holds taco fundraiser for flight nurse killed in plane crash

Gabrielle Lopez

LAS CRUCES, N.M. (KVIA) — The Las Cruces Border Patrol Morale, Welfare and Recreation is hosting a fundraiser in honor of a flight nurse killed in a plane crash near the Capitan Mountain area.

Lincoln County said a medical plane with four passengers crashed. The cause is still under investigation. A growing fire is tied to the crash.

 Trans Aero MedEvac, a medical transportation company identified the victims:

Keelan Clark, Generation Jets Pilot

Ali Kawsara, Generation Jets Pilot

Sarah Clark, Trans Aero MedEvac Flight Nurse

Jamie Novick, Trans Aero MedEvac Flight Nurse

Friday’s fundraiser is for Clark and her family. The Las Cruces Border Patrol MWR and Los Corrales Mexican Food will sell birria taco plates until 1 p.m. at the Border Patrol Station (3120 N. Main St.).

Each plate costs $15, according to the Border Patrol MWR. Plates include 3 tacos, rice, beans, consomé, lime and onions.

To order, text (915) 666-1572.

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COCC to award first associate degrees at Oregon prison

Kelsey Merison

MADRAS, Ore. (KTVZ) — Central Oregon Community College’s education program at Deer Ridge Correctional Institution is set to confer its first-ever associate degree awards. Nine students will receive their college degrees at the annual graduation ceremony on Tuesday, June 9th, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

The ceremony will take place at the facility located at 3920 E. Ashwood Road in Madras, marking a significant milestone for the recently established program.

The associate degree program began in the spring of 2024, representing a new initiative by COCC. Financial assistance for students in the program is largely provided by federal Pell Grants, following a 2023 legislative change that lifted a 26-year ban on these grants for incarcerated individuals.

When Congress lifted the ban on Pell Grants for incarcerated individuals in 2023, COCC was one of the first institutions in the country to apply for and receive the national grant certification.

Tony Russell, instructional dean at Central Oregon Community College, emphasized the program’s importance. “This program exemplifies COCC’s commitment to educational access and we’re so excited to reach this milestone with our first graduating class,” Russell said.

Under the guidance of COCC biology professor Emma Chaput, the college introduced a fully accredited, cohort-modeled associate degree program. Approximately 30 adults in custody are enrolled in the program during the academic year, out of about 1,100 at Deer Ridge.

COCC instructors travel to the facility to teach subjects that have included biology, history, communication, and human development. The degree awarded is a transfer award, designed to allow students to continue their college studies upon release.

The RAND Corporation conducted a study indicating that recidivism rates for adults in custody who earn an associate degree fall to 13.7%. For those who earn their GED in prison, recidivism rates drop to 50%.

The college provides a range of instructional services at Deer Ridge through a contract established in 2008 with the Oregon Department of Corrections. These educational services include Adult Basic Skills classes and a welding program, anchored by a state-mandated GED prep program.

Welding students will also be awarded certificates at the June 9th commencement ceremony. GED students enrolled in the program will be recognized at a later ceremony.

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Woman seriously injured in Camden County crash

Jazsmin Halliburton

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A woman suffered serious injuries in a crash in Camden County on Thursday evening.

According to a Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report, the 26-year-old female passenger from Butler was heading north on Highway 5 just south of Sellers Road at 6:14 p.m. in a 2013 Dodge Ram 3500 driven by a 28-year-old Butler man. The Dodge Ram went off the right side of the road, hit a sign and began to overturn. The truck then crossed the centerline, hit another sign and travelled off the left side of the road and down an embankment.

The 26-year-old woman suffered serious injuries, and the male driver suffered moderate injuries. Both were transported to Lake Regional Hospital via Lake West EMS.

The driver and the passenger were not wearing seatbelts.

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23-year-old Rexburg man charged with distribution of child pornography

Seth Ratliff

REXBURG, Idaho (KIFI) — A 23-year-old Rexburg man, William S. Messer, has been charged with two felony counts of distribution of child sexually exploitative material (child pornography) following an mutli-month Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) investigation.

The investigation began on Feb. 11 after the Rexburg Police Department received a CyberTip from the Idaho Attorney General’s Office ICAC Task Force.

On Wednesday, May 20, detectives executed a search warrant at Messer’s apartment near 5th West and University Blvd. Following a search of the residence and subsequent follow-up investigation, Rexburg police took Messer into custody.

Messer was arraigned in Madison County Court on May 21st. If convicted on the felony charges, Messer faces a maximum of 30 years in state prison and a possible fine of up to $50,000.

The operation involved a massive multi-agency effort. Rexburg police were assisted by the Madison County Sheriff’s Office, Idaho Falls Police Department, Bonneville County Sheriff’s Office, the Idaho ICAC Task Force, the Rocky Mountain Information Network (RMIN), the Madison County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, and the Idaho Attorney General’s Office.

In a news release, Rexburg PD highlighted the inter-agency partnership that led to the arrest.

“Cases involving the exploitation of children are taken extremely seriously, and this investigation highlights the strong partnership between local, state, and regional agencies working together to protect vulnerable individuals.”

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Celebrate Oregon Wine Month at Art Meets Wine in Sunriver fundraiser

Kelsey Merison

SUNRIVER, Ore. (KTVZ) — The annual Art Meets Wine in Sunriver event will return for its eighth year on Saturday, May 30th, from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Sunriver SHARC. The event, hosted by the Sunriver Women’s Club, serves as a major fundraiser to support nonprofits in south Deschutes County.

The Sunriver Women’s Club uses the event as a cornerstone of its mission to give back to the community. Through its Community Grant Program, the club awarded over $96,000 in 2025.

Art Meets Wine 2025, credit: Sunriver Women’s Club

Guests at the event can visit ten winery tasting stations and observe live art demonstrations. The gathering also features auctions offering items such as getaway experiences in Bend and Hood River, a round of golf at Crosswater Golf Club, and original art pieces.

The event provides an opportunity to celebrate Oregon Wine Month. It allows attendees to explore Oregon’s wine country without leaving Sunriver.

More information and tickets are available at artmeetswine.org.

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Structure fire in Bend Thursday evening leaves two homes uninhabitable

Kelsey Merison

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — At 11:30 pm on Thursday, May 21 2026, multiple 911 callers reported a structure fire near Boyd Acres Rd in NE Bend.  First arriving fire units found two residences heavily involved in fire with extension into nearby brush and trees and a second alarm was called. The fire was knocked down quickly, with fire progression stopped within 45 minutes. Assistance was received during the incident from Redmond Fire & Rescue, Cloverdale Fire, and Sunriver Fire.  Both residences were uninhabitable with one a total loss, and Red Cross assistance was requested for the residents.  Losses are estimated in excess of 1 million dollars.  

The fire is under investigation at this time.  

The fire did extend into adjacent brush and trees, but was quickly stopped by fire crews.  Wildfires and wildfire losses aren’t just in rural areas, they can occur even within City limits.  Taking simple steps, such as clearing combustible material within 5 feet of the house and using non-combustible ground cover, can greatly reduce the risk of losing your home to wildfire.  For more information on reducing wildfire risk,

This is a developing story. Stay with the digital platforms of KTVZ News for urgent updates.

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Good Vibes Only: Every Little Blessing Preschool nurtures bright futures

Rosemary Garcia

EL PASO, Texas (KVIA)—Every Little Blessing (ELB) is a local preschool dedicated to supporting the development of children with Down syndrome and other educational needs.

The center was founded in 2018. The director of academics, Jessica Quinn, said the preschool celebrates the uniqueness of every child! She said most parents learn about ELB through word of mouth.

For Borderland parent Lydia Rios, she has seen the positive impact the school has had on her son, Noah. He was born with Down syndrome and is also autistic.

She described her son as incredibly smart. “He is wild. He is hilarious. He’s a little class clown. He loves making new friends. Noah doesn’t know strangers.”

Her son has been enrolled at ELB for four years. Thanks to the center, her son is able to better communicate using a communication device.

“I see how much he learns from them and vice versa. I think that’s what makes this place special: even the kids who are typically developing are learning from kids like mine,” Rios said.

Quinn said many parents express how thankful they are!

“Parents come back to you later and tell you what a difference you’ve made in their child’s life long term is a really great compliment,” Quinn said.

At ELB, children are able to learn empathy and understanding. They also foster a culture of inclusion and kindness. Quinn said another benefit is the small student-to-teacher ratio.

”I think getting to spend the amount of time with our kids and our families, we really do become a team together. So I think that’s the most special part,” Quinn said.

Rios said Every Little Blessing Preschool has helped her son blossom!

“He doesn’t want to leave this place. So it’s hard to get him to go home,” she said.

If you’re interested in learning more, click here.

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