Senior home faces lawsuit after woman’s death in extreme heat

By Tamara Richter

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    ELK GROVE, California (KCRA) — An Elk Grove senior home is facing a civil lawsuit after family members say their loved one died after being left outside in extreme heat.

According to the lawsuit filed in June, the 74-year-old woman was admitted to WellQuest Elk Grove just three days before she passed away last October. The lawsuit says she had dementia and was found unattended outside, where the temperature was over 100 degrees.

According to the lawsuit, she had burns on her body, and no one knew how long she had been outside. Her family is suing for elder neglect and wrongful death.

KCRA 3 reached out to the legal team for WellQuest, but has not heard back.

The case is due back in court next week.

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Man accused of throwing lit piece of fake dynamite at another man in city park

By Paula Wethington

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    MONROE, Michigan (WWJ) — A lit piece of what police later learned was fake dynamite was thrown Monday evening by one man toward another man’s vehicle at a city park in Monroe, Michigan, police said.

The alleged altercation happened at Veterans Park on North Custer Road, which is along the River Raisin, just west of Telegraph Road. One man was later arrested. No one was injured, police said, although the accused pulled a handgun on the victim.

Monroe police began investigating the following morning, when the alleged victim returned to the park and saw the other man fishing behind Monroe Fire Station 2. He called authorities shortly after 8 a.m. and related what had happened the previous night.

The victim told police that the other man had approached his van and thrown a lit, fake piece of dynamite onto the hood of his vehicle. “In an instinctive reaction, the victim retrieved the fake dynamite and threw it back at the suspect, unsure of whether it was real,” police said.

After the item was thrown back, police said, the suspect pulled out a handgun and ordered the victim to freeze. The suspect then walked away and resumed fishing.

After arriving at the park Tuesday morning, police detained the 72-year-old man, who was from the Monroe area. A loaded .45 caliber handgun and a loaded .22 caliber handgun were found in his pants pocket. The suspect has a valid concealed pistol license.

The suspect admitted to the events as described by the victim, police said.

He was then arrested and taken to Monroe County Jail. Police are seeking charges on two counts of felonious assault and presenting a fake explosive device.

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Residents raise concerns about loudspeaker used by mosque for call to prayer

By Gino Vicci

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    DEARBORN, Michigan (WWJ) — A contentious battle is brewing in Dearborn, Michigan, over a mosque’s use of an outdoor loudspeaker for its call to prayer.

One resident spoke at Tuesday’s city council meeting, presenting a signed petition over the speaker at the Dearborn Community Center on Schaefer Road.

Andrea Unger cited a city ordinance, which states that people are prohibited from creating “the continuance of any unreasonably loud, disturbing, unusual or unnecessary noise which annoys, disturbs, injures, or endangers the comfort, repose, health, peace or safety of others within the limits of the city.”

“The mosques in East Dearborn are at times waking us up at 5:30 a.m. with a call to prayer and, at other times, forcing us to listen to the prayer in our yard and in our own home,” Unger said in the meeting.

During Tuesday’s meeting, Council President Mike Sareini said police investigated and gathered decibel tests from certain mosques. Sareini said the city has found instances of a mosque violating the city ordinance.

Sareini said the board is awaiting the police’s report before any action can be taken.

“We’re trying to get a handle on it, and it’s not legal, nor do we support it,” Sareini said.

Nabeel Bahalwan, director of the Dearborn Community Center, says there has been an ongoing complaint from a small group of residents, and he insists no rules are being broken. Bahalwan says police visited his site and informed him that he was within the allowable noise limit.

“This is crazy. We don’t wanna bother anybody,” Bahalwan told CBS News Detroit. “The city came in, the inspector, and there is a monitoring for the voice. We are even below the average of the rules.”

A call to prayer is a call for people of a specific faith to gather for worship. The Dearborn Community Center has a prayer schedule on its website, which occurs five times a day.

Under the city’s ordinance, intermittent noise is any noise that “goes on and off during a course of measurement of at least five minutes, but which exceeds ten seconds in duration each time it is on.

According to the city ordinance, 55 decibels is considered intermittent noise for a residential area at nighttime (between 10 p.m. and 7 a.m.), whereas 60 decibels is considered intermittent during the day (7 a.m. to 10 p.m.). In commercial areas, 60 decibels are characterized as intermittent at night and 65 decibels during the day. Meanwhile, 70 decibels are labeled intermittent in industrial areas at night and 75 decibels during the day.

The ordinance also states that the use of loudspeakers is prohibited between 10 p.m. and 7 a.m.

Bahalwan says he does not believe his mosque is violating any ordinance; however, he is concerned that some residents aren’t happy.

“We wanna keep our relationship with the neighbors peaceful. If they have any problems, they can talk to us,” he said.

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FWC receives 163,459 bear hunt applications

By Hayley Crombleholme

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    ORLANDO, Florida (WESH) — So far, 163,459 applications have been submitted to take part in Florida’s first bear hunt in a decade.

Avid hunters like Chuck Echenique submitted multiple.

“I ended up submitting 50 applications across a couple of different locations,” Echenique said.

But it’s not just hunters who submitted applications, but also those opposed to it.

“I bought 105 applications or tickets myself, and we, along with the Sierra Club, had a large pitch around the state,” said Chuck O’Neal, president of Speak Up Wekiva and Speak Up for Wildlife.

He is one of the people who participated in a campaign to purchase permit applications in the hopes of preventing them from being allocated to actual hunters.

The Sierra Club used the slogan “Bag a tag and spare a bear,” encouraging and instructing people on how to buy a Florida hunting license and enter the bear tag lottery.

But the number of people who will actually be selected in that lottery is pretty small.

“We have a limited number of tags,” said George Warthen, chief conservation officer for Florida Fish and Wildlife. “Way more people want to get those tags than there are tags available.”

According to the FWC website, a total of 172 bear harvest permits will be issued across four different zones.

“They will be specific to a bear hunting zone, and that would be the zone that you could use your tag in. You wouldn’t be able to move to another zone,” Warthen said.

Central Florida’s zone has the fewest permits available at 18. The FWC reports that 49,649 applications were submitted for that zone.

WESH 2 asked those who entered the lottery how good they felt about their odds of getting one in any zone.

“They’re slim to none,” Echenique said. “I mean, you’ve only got 172 permits available.

“What do we think the odds are?” O’Neal said. “We think the odds are very good.”

FWC hasn’t said when people will find out if they were picked from the lottery to receive a permit. However, they said they will receive an email if selected, and they’ll have until Oct. 6 to claim it.

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Live pipe bomb discovered at firearms range in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula

By Paula Wethington

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    Michigan (WWJ) — A live pipe bomb was discovered at a firearms range, then safely dismantled, in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, Michigan State Police said.

The pipe bomb was discovered and reported at about 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at a public firearms range off South Gaines Highway near Shortcut Road in Chippewa County’s Kinross Township.

After troopers from the Sault Ste. Marie Post arrived, they requested assistance from the Michigan State Police Bomb Squad. That team deployed a robot to get a closer look at the item and confirmed the device was live.

Troopers then safely rendered the device inert while it was on site.

The firearms range was closed temporarily for the emergency response and investigation, but has since reopened.

MSP asks that anyone who has information about the device contact the Sault Ste. Marie Post at 906-632-2217.

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Man attacks woman picking up her kids from school

By Cecil Hannibal

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    SACRAMENTO, California (KCRA) — Sacramento police are investigating after a woman was sexually assaulted while picking her kids up from school. Authorities have yet to arrest a suspect in this case.

It happened just before noon at American Lakes School in South Natomas.

“This is me walking them to the car,” said Cynthia Paris as she showed KCRA 3 surveillance video from the school’s security cameras.

Paris said she was picking up two of her children early for a dentist appointment, and while putting them in the back seat, she didn’t notice the man standing near her car.

She was parked right in front of a school she visits daily, and never expected what would happen next.

Surveillance video shows her walking by him towards the driver’s side of her vehicle when the man lunged towards her and grabbed her.

“He picked me up,” Paris said, fighting back tears as she recalled the terrifying moments. “He groped me,” she said, holding her silence. “I just remember trying to push him off and get him away from me,” Paris said.

Surveillance video captured the moment an unknown man grabbed Cynthia Paris in broad daylight, with her children sitting in the backseat of her car.

Paris screamed and fought until the man ran away, all while her 6- and 7-year-old children watched from the backseat.

“They were angry for me and sad for me because they saw everything, you know,” Paris said. “It makes me feel angry and uneasy,” she added, expressing her distress over the suspect still being at large.

KCRA 3 contacted the Sacramento Police Department, which confirmed that this is an active sexual assault investigation but could not provide any suspect details or descriptions.

“He intentionally covered his face,” Paris said, explaining that she never saw the man’s face due to a mask and hood.

Until the suspect is caught, Paris said her family cannot regain a sense of peace. “More anxiety picking them up, constantly like looking around before I do anything,” said Paris.

KCRA 3 also contacted the Natomas Unified School District, which stated it is fully cooperating with authorities but cannot share any details as this is an active investigation.

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Agritourism helping Utah farms stay afloat during tough times

By Amy Nay

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    CHESTER, Utah (KSTU) — Many families will venture out to find a pumpkin patch this fall, but what you may not realize is that the fun weekend activity may actually be going a long way toward helping save a local family farm.

In Chester, Sunder Creek Farms owners Brett and Jenna Madsen were busy getting ready on Wednesday for the weekend kickoff to their pumpkin patch.

“Farming here, especially here in Sanpete County, it’s tough. We’ve got limited water, limited resources. You know, we have good years. But the last few years have been pretty challenging financially,” said Brett.

Born and raised in the northern part of the county, Brett married into Sunder Creeks Farms nearly two decades ago.

“I am third generation. My grandpa was a dairy farmer in Lehi, and my dad continued, and they moved here to Chester, and I get to carry on with my 4, almost 5 boys,” said Jenna. “I am the fourth daughter of a dairy farmer, so I deserved to have 5 boys!”

The Madsens were featured on the History Channel’s “American Farmer” series in 2019.

“It was quite the experience,” Brett said, “Telling our story about agriculture and the challenges. And there are a lot of misconceptions. You know, the majority of food in the U.S. comes from small family farms like ours.”

Brett worked for Jenna’s dad on the farm while in high school. After they married and moved back from college, they eventually added the holiday activities to help keep them afloat.

“You can make a little money to make up for your losses,” explained Brett. “And at the end of the day, we were able to make our farm payments and make things happen because of the agri-tourism part of our farm.”

“It keeps us going,” Jenna added. “Gives you hope for the future and it’s fun!”

The farm offers a corn maze, fun for the kids, and plenty of homegrown pumpkins of all shapes and sizes.

Sunder Creek mainly produces alfalfa and hay, and since selling their turkey operations and dairy cattle, they now focus on feed and some beef cattle, and also host weddings and other special events.

“It’s not big, it’s not extravagant. It’s low-key, a slower pace, and you don’t have thousands of people,” said Jenna. “We’ve had a lot of people from the Wasatch Front come down and really enjoy coming to the pumpkin patch.”

While the farm is an hour-and-a-half drive from Salt Lake City, Jenna shared, “Our valley is so beautiful, it’s worth the drive.”

The Madsens say this year has been one of their hardest, hoping visitors coming to get a taste of the country this fall will help their bottom line and allow them to continue to do what they love for generations to come.

“It’s definitely a family farm, and we try to keep that feel on the pumpkin patch,” Jenna said.

“We’re living the dream and loving it,” Brett shared. “There’s still a lot of challenges. It’s hard every day, and we’ve got to think outside the box and thank goodness [Jenna’s] sharp enough to find ways to make money.”

Sunder Creek Farms kicks off their special pumpkin patch and fun family activities on Friday and will be open from noon to dark Fridays and Saturdays, and then mid-October, the gates will be open weekdays starting at 3 p.m.

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Family of hunter killed by lightning strike finds peace in way he died

By Mythili Gubbi

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    SALT LAKE CITY (KSTU) — Ian Stasko’s sister has plenty of memories to remember her brother by.

“Like the river we’d go fishing at every time, he’d ring up rope swings, like from countless trees. Within the two miles we live in, [he would] find snowy hills to go sledding on. It was like everything was truly an adventure with him,” shared Dylan Stasko.

Stasko lived in Salt Lake City and loved the outdoors and was curious, kind, and loved exploring.

“He was always looking,” added Dylan. “Like for the best in people and the next thing to do.”

A little over two weeks ago, Ian and his best friend, Andrew Porter, set out on an elk hunting trip in Colorado, in the Trujillo Meadows Reservoir area, close to the New Mexico border. His family said the duo planned well and had all the right gear, and even a communication plan with Andrew’s fiancée.

“If there was no ping in 24 hours, they were going to start a search party, essentially,” Dylan explained.

That’s exactly what happened two weeks ago when Dylan and her mother, Michelle, traveled to Colorado to help search after no one had heard from either Ian or Andrew.

“It was terrifying. But I wasn’t prepared when I drove up and saw the [police] tape and all the cars. I kind of lost it there. It definitely felt more real,” said Ian and Dylan’s mother, Michelle Sirch.

A few days later, Ian’s family received the worst possible news.

“It was kind of clear as soon as we got up there that he had not made it,” Sirch explained.

Crews found the duo’s car at the Rio De Los Pinos trailhead, and their bodies about two miles from there. Earlier this week, a coroner determined their cause of death as a lightning strike.

“I think a relief and also a frustration,” said Dylan of learning of her brother’s death. “A bit… just kind of like… why it had to happen… a lot of relief that there’s nothing that we or they could have done differently.”

Weather in the backcountry can change quickly and is always a danger.

“Typically, what we see in the summertime, on those thunderstorm days, we’ll see those white, bubbly clouds build up over the mountains that kind of look like cauliflower. That’s the first sign that the atmosphere might be favorable to thunderstorms on a particular day,” explained National Weather Service meteorologist Alex Desmet. “And if you see those clouds turning darker, that’s a good sign that conditions are favorable for thunderstorms, and certainly when you hear that thunder, then it’s time to take action and get to a safe place.”

Utah State Parks officials recommend making sure you have a plan in place if things get dangerous in the wilderness.

“Along your route, know the spots, have them marked off on your map, of hey, this is the closest high ground, this is the closest cover, this is the most exposed area, I want to make sure I get through that spot as quickly as possible,” shared Utah State Parks deputy director Devan Chavez.

For Dylan, it was almost a poetic end to Ian’s extraordinary life.

“I can’t imagine a better way to go out,” she said. “That they were with each other, doing what they loved in an absolutely beautiful place.”

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Retail theft ring tied to Mexican cartel ends in 8 arrests

By Mariana La Roche, Hannah Hilyard

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    KENOSHA COUNTY, Wis. (WISN) — The Kenosha County Sheriff’s Office said investigators arrested eight people connected to a Mexican cartel following a months-long investigation into an organized retail theft ring operating across multiple states.

The investigation led to the execution of search warrants at an apartment on 28th Avenue in Kenosha and a storage unit on May 6.

“I want to say it was 5 or 6 a.m. I had heard like a loud boom,” one neighbor who did not want to be identified told WISN 12 News Wednesday about the apartment raid. “They were all suited up. They had AR-15s. I mean, you could just tell. They had shields. I honestly heard them throw, I believe, it was a flash bang.”

According to the sheriff’s office, the investigation began in March 2025 when Kenosha Drug Operations Group detectives were contacted by Oak Brook, Illinois, police regarding an investigation involving Homeland Security Investigations and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. A criminal complaint said Illinois investigators “obtained a warrant to put a tracker” on a suspect vehicle and traced it to that apartment in Kenosha.

Investigators arrested the eight suspects and conducted the search warrants at the apartment and storage unit, finding thousands of dollars worth of clothing from stores like Lululemon, Nike, American Eagle and Victoria’s Secret. The total value of the stolen items was around $120,000.

Court documents said the thieves would “work in pairs” and conceal items underneath loose clothing before walking out of stores “without paying for any of the merchandise.” And they covered a lot of ground. Prosecutors said they hit places like the Pleasant Prairie Premium Outlets, Johnson Creek and Mayfair Mall.

The group has direct ties to Cartel La Familia Michoacana in Mexico. The sheriff’s office said four suspects, Fausto Gonzalez-Medrano, Manuel Perez-Sanchez, Yareli Salas-Ramirez, and Danna Paola Gomez, posted bonds up to $25,000 but were detained by ICE and deported to Mexico. They now have fully extraditable warrants.

The remaining suspects, Jose Antonio Baez-Fuerte, Jorge Alberto Villeda-Sevilla, Sharon Jazmin Villeda-Sevilla, and Ana Paola Villeda-Sevilla, remain in custody at the Kenosha County Jail.

“It’s kind of scary just knowing that they were affiliated with the cartel,” the neighbor said.

The operation involved collaboration between multiple agencies, including HSI offices in Houston and Milwaukee, Oak Brook police, and Katy, Texas, police.

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CashStashKC sparks weekly treasure hunts by hiding $100 across Kansas City

By Krista Tatschl

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    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KMBC) — If you walk by a tall man slyly placing green stickers, stuck to dollar bills, on tables, poles and even in weeds around Kansas City, you’ve probably just crossed paths with “CashStashKC.”

“We hide money around Kansas City for people to find, treasure-hunt style,” says the man, who goes by his social media handle. “This is a cool way to highlight business locations and things to do.”

On Wednesday, KMBC was the only station invited to tag along for a cash drop in the Link tunnel connecting Union Station to Crown Center.

Sporting a black hoodie and walking slowly, he waited until the coast was clear, stooped to place a sticker taped to $100 on a metal pole, and recorded the stash on his phone.

He then edited in a nearby location and posted on Facebook, TikTok and Instagram.

“We’d better go back up. People usually show up within minutes,” he said.

He wasn’t wrong.

Within two minutes, a man sprinted to his car, sped into the Union Station parking lot and dashed into the Link. As he searched, he muttered to himself, “Don’t see it, buddy.”

CashStashKC watched with a huge smile from a distance, recording the search. After 10 seconds of hurried hope, the treasure was claimed.

The man took off his hat, held the money up and yelled, “CashStashKC! Hey! Bless up, KC!”

After a few “God bless yous,” he ran out of the Link a little richer, passing others who were only steps behind.

Treasure seeker Jason Wickersheim said, “I was sitting at my desk when he posted four minutes ago. I thought I had a chance. People are fast!”

Others ran into the Link saying, “Just missed it?!” or “I was so close!”

CashStashKC says he started the weekly hunt in April using his own money.

“Now I partner with businesses who want more foot traffic to their shops. Somebody gets to have $100, and that’s great. Why not?”

He currently has almost 48,000 Instagram followers who wait each week for clues to cash.

“People are a little hopeless these days,” he said. “I want to give them something to look forward to. I’m happy to do that.”

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