Air racing takes flight in Roswell for the first time, despite challenges

By Aliyah Chavez

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    ROSWELL, New Mexico (KOAT) — The National Air Racing Competition is set to begin in Roswell, New Mexico, marking the first time in nearly 60 years that the event is held outside of Reno, Nevada.

The competition, referred to by event CEO as “NASCAR in the air,” is establishing its roots in Roswell for the first time, welcoming thousands of fans and racers from around the world.

The city and state have invested more than $10 million to host the event, beating out 38 other U.S. cities for the privilege.

“This, in under a year, we’ve now moved the entire operation… and built it to new, right here in Roswell, New Mexico, on the old Walker Air Force Base,” Fred Telling, CEO of the National Championship Air Races, told KOAT.

However, the competition is not without its hiccups. It was originally planned to host seven event classes, but only five will take place. “We are down two classes, the sport class, and the unlimiteds,” Telling said.

The sport class opted out, citing concerns about Roswell’s ability to build an emergency landing in time. “I’m highly confident they’ll be back next year,” Telling said.

Air racer Tammy Camilleri, who has made four trips to the U.S. this year, staying 20 days each visit, noted the cost of visiting Roswell. She estimates it costs her around $55,000.

Despite these challenges, Mayor Tim Jennings told KOAT he is confident in Roswell’s ability to host the event. “We are ready,” Jennings said.

The National Air Race Competition will run from Sept. 10 through Sept. 14.

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Person charged after forcing UPS driver to lead police on a chase

By Nick Catlin

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    ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (KOAT) — A vehicle chase involving a UPS vehicle ended with a suspect being taken into custody on Interstate 40 in Albuquerque.

The Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office responded to the stolen UPS vehicle with the driver still inside the truck. The law enforcement pursuit and ended near Unser Boulevard, where the vehicle stopped.

The victim is safe and there were no injuries reported after the suspect was taken into custody. Law enforcement said there is no further threat to the community.

The arrested suspect Mukhammed-Emin Idrisov, 35, of Brooklyn, was arrested by deputies. Court documents show Idrisov is charged with false imprisonment and aggravated assault.

The UPS driver told dispatch a vehicle approached him and told him to pull over while delivering packages in To’Hajiilee. This led to the UPS vehicle being involved in a chase with deputies after the suspect entered the vehicle armed with a knife, according to court records.

BCSO is still investigating and gathering information regarding the apparent kidnapping. Traffic on the interstate was closed and delayed due to the law enforcement chase on Monday, Sept. 8.

UPS released a statement following the law enforcement arrest in Albuquerque.

“We are aware of the incident and are working with authorities to investigate. We are thankful our driver is safe.”

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Two people swept away in Albuquerque arroyo get out safely

By Sasha Lenninger, Mike Bolger

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    ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (KOAT) — Two people were swept away in an arroyo near Moon and Spain around 10 p.m. Tuesday as strong storms rolled through the city.

Albuquerque Fire Rescue says around 10:15 p.m., it received a call about two people swept away in an arroyo.

“There was as many as five people reported that were caught up here, but only two actually went into the water,” said Lt. Jason Fejer with AFR.

Both victims traveled about half a mile until they rescued themselves. Fire officials told KOAT that the victims got lucky and are doing OK.

“Where this runs out, it basically dead ends into the golf course down there. … They were very lucky they were actually able to get out and walk away,” said Fejer.

It’s unclear why five people were in the arroyo late at night.

The incident highlights the serious risks posed by flash flooding, especially as the monsoon season intensifies across New Mexico. Arroyos can fill rapidly during downpours, creating dangerous conditions even when it is not raining nearby.

According to Willie West, real estate manager with the Albuquerque Metropolitan Arroyo Flood Control Authority, water in these channels can move at speeds up to 40 mph during flash floods.

“Really, nobody is completely safe from being caught in one of these channels,” West said, adding that smaller arroyos in the northeast heights and west side have proven especially hazardous.

West, along with AFR, urges residents — especially children and homeless people — to avoid using arroyos for recreation or travel.

If someone happens you fall into the arroyo when it’s filled with water, fire officials recommend putting your legs forward, staying above the water and not panicking.

“The biggest thing that fights against you in one of these flood channels is they’re narrow, they’re good at guiding water, and whatever debris in there is going to be the biggest thing working against you,” said Fejer.

If New Mexicans see someone in the arroyo, they are to call for help right away.

“Let us know last place you saw them go in, what they’re wearing, that gives us a description,” said Fejer. “That’s kind of what happened here. They had good people that reported where they went in, and they started deploying crews farther down the Arroyo here.”

He also told KOAT that if you see an encampment in an arroyo, call 311 right away.

While the rain has subsided, more storms are expected toward the end of the week that could cause more rushing waters to flow through the arroyos.

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Man-made waterfall removed to help fish swim freely in Milwaukee River

By Gino Recchia

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    ESTABROOK PARK, Wisconsin (WISN) — What looks like a peaceful waterfall at Estabrook Park is actually a man-made barrier that has blocked fish for generations.

“We are removing some of the bedrock from Estabrook Falls to make the falls more supportive of migration for fish,” said Beth Wentzel with the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District.

Wentzel said the waterfall was never natural. Instead, it was left behind more than a century ago when workers quarried the river for rock used in cement. Now it acts as a fish barrier.

“Fish need to move, especially there’s a number of fish that’s been part of their life down in Lake Michigan. But they need to get up into a river, to spawn, reproduce, and also to find food,” Wentzel said.

The project is funded through grants. Crews started work in July, lowering the bedrock on one side of the river while diverting water with sandbags. The project will leave a small waterfall on one side and a deeper channel for fish to swim through on the other.

The timeline for completion has been complicated by heavy August rains that delayed construction by several weeks. District officials say they have a permit through the end of September, and within the next week, they’ll know whether regulators will allow work to continue into October.

The timing matters because salmon are beginning their fall migration upstream, and anglers will soon crowd the riverbanks for the season.

“The Milwaukee River is a really special place for this community, and restoring it to a healthy river is really exciting,” Wentzel said.

This project could help lake sturgeon return to the Milwaukee River, a species that once thrived here generations ago but disappeared after dams and pollution wiped out their population.

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Woman, the last living descendant of one of the ‘Six Triple Eight’, honors her mother’s legacy

By Ja Nai Wright

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    HARFORD COUNTY, Maryland (WMAR) — Formally known as the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, Six Triple Eight was an all-Black women’s Army Corps unit serving overseas in World War II.

Stationed in England and France, 855 Black women had one job — to sort massive mail backlogs for millions of American service members and civilians.

Despite facing racial discrimination, segregation and difficult working conditions, the Six Triple Eight cleared the backlog of around 17 million pieces of mail ahead of schedule.

“They were backlog they said for over two years or something and they got through it in a couple months,” Tamala Mosby-Byrd said.

Mosby-Byrd who lives in Joppatowne,is the last living daughter of Private Elizabeth Moraney. She says she was the only person she knew whose mother served in World War II.

But that’s not where the firsts end.

“And after she got out, she was the first black woman to be at the post office in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania,” Mosby-Byrd said.

After the women of the Six Triple Eight returned home, they were never honored for their hard work.

Now, 80 years later, Moraney along with the other 854 women in the Six Triple Eight are being recognized nationally for their efforts.

“I’m so proud of her, but I am just sorry that she is not here to see it,” Mosby-Byrd said.

Wednesday there will be a ceremony at Indiantown Gap National Cemetery in Annville, Pennsylvania to honor Private Elizabeth Moraney.

Mosby-Byrd says she is excited about the event.

“I’m just happy that I’m here to do it and I hope like people say I just hope somewhere there’s someway that she’s gone but she knows that I’m here,” Mosby-Byrd said.

Wednesday’s event is part of a bigger effort to locate descendants of members of the 6888 and to ensure members receive proper military burial honors.

“This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. WMAR’s editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.”

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Milwaukee Public Works staffer on leave over ‘alarming’ sex act video

By Derrick Rose

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    MILWAUKEE (WISN) — A Milwaukee Department of Public Works employee is on leave as the department investigates a video posted to social media containing sexual acts adjacent to a city-owned department vehicle.

The video, which was posted to social media on Sept. 7 and viewed thousands of times, shows what appears to be a man and woman engaging in multiple sexual acts.

The proximity to a public works vehicle prompted an investigation into the contents of the video.

“We are aware of the video. The content is alarming, and this incident is currently under investigation. We take this matter very seriously. The employee has been placed on leave during this process,” a public works spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

The spokesperson could not provide additional details, including whether Milwaukee Police are also investigating.

It is also unclear when the video was recorded. It is also unclear if either person in the video is directly connected to the public works department.

Despite the video containing sexual acts, it had not been removed by the time this story was published.

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‘It pretty much saved my life’: Grief support group leader helps others 12 years after losing wife

By SHELBY COUNTY, Alabama

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    SHELBY COUNTY, Alabama (WVTM) — 12 years ago, Peter Jackson faced one of the hardest days of his life after losing his wife to a stroke.

“I lost my wife due to a sudden and massive hemorrhagic stroke. That was on a Monday evening. By Friday, we had to disconnect and let her go,” said Jackson.

Grief support classes with GriefShare helped him navigate that loss.

“I attended the program, went through all the classes, and it pretty much saved my life in more ways than one,” said Jackson.

GriefShare started in Wake Forest, North Carolina and now helps those who are grieving all across the country and right here in Alabama.

For the last 10 years, Jackson has been a leader and facilitator for GriefShare.

“What the program will enable them to do is manage and control their grief. It’s something that doesn’t go away entirely, but they are able to manage and control it, rather than the grief managing and controlling them,” said Jackson.

The 13-week series for the grief classes kicks off on Thursday.

The classes are freestanding, so if you experience a loss now or later on in the series, GriefShare invites you to join.

You can also attend the classes if you are struggling with grief from a less recent loss.

To get connected with GriefShare in Shelby County you can reach out online, by phone at 205-908-6529 or by email at FromMourningToJoy@gmail.com

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‘We were devastated’; families defrauded in an animal cremation con speak out

By Graham Cawthon, Lydia Blackstone

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    KINGSLAND, Georgia (WJCL) — A Kingsland couple accused of defrauding grieving pet owners through a crematory business has been arrested in Louisiana, according to police.

Nader and Amanda Rayan were taken into custody Saturday in Kenner, La., following a BOLO alert. Kingsland police said the arrests stem from an investigation into Compassionate Care Pet Crematory Services, where the couple allegedly mishandled animal remains and scammed families out of thousands of dollars.

Becky Morris of Hortense said she and her husband sent more than 25 pets from their farm to the crematory. When the remains were returned, she said the ashes did not appear authentic.

“There’s just stickers with names scribbled on it,” Morris said. “Some of them had Ziploc baggies. Three pets didn’t even return.”

Morris estimated her family lost about $10,000 to the crematory, in addition to the emotional toll.

Police said the investigation revealed the Rayans mistreated animals and exploited grieving families. This is not the couple’s first brush with the law: they were arrested in 2016 in Florida in connection with a funeral home fraud scheme.

The Kingsland Police Department, working with other agencies, executed a search warrant at the crematory on Aug. 26. Investigators said they discovered evidence of mishandled remains behind the business.

The Rayans face multiple fraud charges. Police called it “one of the most disturbing cases” they have handled.

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‘I kept going’: Wisconsin husband details how he faked his own death

By Hannah Hilyard

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    GREEN LAKE, Wisconsin (WISN) — For the first time, we’re hearing from Ryan Borgwardt in his own words. The man, once known as Green Lake’s missing kayaker, told investigators during a three-hour recorded conversation how he faked his drowning and ran away to eastern Europe to meet a woman he’d met online.

And 12 News Investigates obtained it through an open records request.

From his final text exchange with his wife to the first dispatch call, it’s all revealed in the newly released video and documents.

“He was on a kayak,” the dispatch call stated. “And she woke up, and he is not home. And she can’t get a hold of him.”

“Oh dear,” the other person on the call responded.

Body camera footage, time-stamped August 2024, then showed the moment deputies found his van and overturned kayak in Green Lake.

Investigators initially believed Borgwardt’s disappearance was a drowning, but a deep dive into his laptop revealed he was actually alive.

“Ryan, I beg you, give me a call,” Green Lake County Sheriff Mark Podoll said in a video to Borgwardt.

After 54 days of searching the lake, the sheriff’s office turned to an all-out blitz to reach the missing kayaker through video messages, news conferences, and emails to the European girlfriend with the subject “Call us. Very Important.”

It worked.

“I’m in my apartment. I am safe, secure, no problem,” Borgwardt said in a video message sent to detectives and eventually released publicly.

WISN 12 News even obtained Borgwardt’s video proof of his flight back to the United States. All of this evidence led up to his first sit-down with investigators in December 2024.

During the interview, Borgwardt described his late-night kayak ride and elaborate plan. “Countless times, I said, ‘Why am I doing this?’ But I kept going,” he said. “The amount of hours that I spent trying to disappear would blow your mind.”

He explained how he used an inflatable boat to reach shore, rode an e-bike to Madison, and took a Greyhound to the Canadian border. It’s at the border he met with agents suspicious because he showed up with a dead phone and no license.

“I think he started to wonder if I was trying to run away from something because he started to ask questions like ‘Are you married? Is everything OK?'” Borgwardt said.

Borgwardt eventually made his way to Georgia in Eastern Europe, staying there until he received the email from detectives that made his “heart fall through the floor.”

The email exchange with detectives lasted a month before he returned home to face the consequences.

“Everybody’s a bit perplexed as to why you took this path,” a detective said during the interview.

Borgwardt responded, “I guess, in the end, it came down to the feeling of failure in about every aspect of your life.”

After returning to the U.S., he pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor obstruction charge. Last month, a judge sentenced him to three months in custody, and he has already paid $30,000 to Green Lake County to reimburse them for the costs incurred.

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Emmett Till family member Priscilla Williams Till launches US Senate campaign

By Chris Oswalt

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    JACKSON, Mississippi (WAPT) — Priscilla Williams Till, a cousin of Emmett Till and founder of the Emmett Till Justice for Families Foundation, announced her candidacy for the United States Senate in Mississippi’s 2026 election.

Till said she is entering the race to promote social justice and civil rights protections at the national level. On her campaign website, she described her run as an effort to address historical and ongoing inequalities and ensure marginalized communities are represented in Washington.

“I am running for United States Senator to help shape and enact laws that promote social justice and civil rights protections at a national level in Mississippi,” Till said in her announcement. “I want to ensure that the perspectives and needs of our communities are represented with the federal government contributing to a more inclusive political dialogue.”

Till highlighted her family connection to Emmett Till, whose 1955 murder in Mississippi galvanized the civil rights movement. She said her advocacy work has been shaped by that legacy and by her role leading a foundation focused on federal accountability in hate crimes and racial justice cases.

Her campaign website outlines plans to seek greater oversight committees to prosecute hate crimes and expand equitable protections.

The Mississippi Senate election is scheduled for Nov. 3, 2026. Party primaries are set for March 10, 2026.

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