Cop child-porn case; dogs ravage petting zoo; mock-up shuts airport
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Odd and interesting news from around the West.
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FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) — Rocky Mountain National Park is on track to have another record-setting year for visitation.
The Coloradoan reports (http://noconow.co/2cSUXgQ ) that the park has welcomed more than 3 million visitors this year, a nearly 8 percent increase from the same time last year.
The park has broken visitation records every month of 2016 so far, and it's on pace to beat out the annual record of more than 4 million visitors set in 2015.
Rocky Mountain spokesman Kyle Patterson attributes the growth to the increasing population of Colorado's Front Range, a boost in the economy and reduced gas prices.
Patterson is encouraging people to visit the park to watch the annual elk rut, in which elk battle each other during mating season from mid-September through mid-October.
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Information from: Fort Collins Coloradoan, http://www.coloradoan.com
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CABAZON, Calif. (AP) — A man in a stolen semitrailer rig has been arrested after a three-hour chase through the desert east of Los Angeles.
The man parked in a rest spot and peacefully surrendered around 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Riverside County community of Whitewater.
The rig reportedly was taken from a Barstow hotel as the driver slept.
Authorities say the chase began around 10:30 a.m. in Apple Valley. With CHP officers in pursuit, the truck went through the Cajon Pass and along various freeways, sometimes at a snail's pace.
The driver told CHP officials by phone that he didn't want to go back to jail.
The truck is owned by hazardous waste hauler ACT Enviro. Company President Walter Singer tells the Los Angeles Times (http://lat.ms/2c8TPJ4 ) that no hazardous materials were aboard.
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DENVER (AP) — A 21-year-old custodian with a suburban Denver school district has been charged with sending nude photos of himself to a 13-year-old female student.
Authorities say Jacob David Deal is charged with internet sexual exploitation of a child.
Deal has been suspended from his job as a janitor at an elementary school and a middle school in Jefferson County.
The Jefferson County Sheriff's Office says Deal was arrested Monday after a girl in the middle school reported receiving nude photos of Deal on Aug. 26.
Deal is being held at the Jefferson County jail. Bail has been set at $25,000.
Deal did not yet have an attorney Tuesday.
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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Police say a man is under arrest after pretending to be a U.S. Marshal to try and avoid paying two escorts.
Authorities said Monday that Joel Graf hired the women to dance for him and a teenage boy at a hotel room in Provo, but when they finished he didn't want to pay.
Provo police say the women went to a bathroom to change early Sunday morning and when they returned he was holding a gun and a badge.
Police say the man told them he was a U.S. Marshal and he'd arrest them if they didn't leave without pay.
Graf was arrested on suspicion of impersonating a law enforcement officer as well as alcohol and weapon charges.
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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Two Los Angeles police officers have been charged with covering up a drunken driving accident and lying on their report.
The Los Angeles Times reports (http://lat.ms/2cq4xZ1 ) the officers pleaded not guilty last week to felony charges of conspiracy and filing a false report. Each faces up to three years in jail if convicted.
About two years ago, the officers were sent to Boyle Heights, where a drunken driver had hit two parked cars.
Prosecutors say the officers decided not to conduct an investigation and wrote a report that said the driver had fled the scene.
In fact, prosecutors say the officers put the man in their patrol car, drove him to his apartment and told him to get some sleep.
The driver was never charged with a crime.
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Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com/
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ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — A Los Alamos National Laboratory employee is facing felony charges after security officials at the Albuquerque International Sunport thought a mock-up of a technical apparatus was a bomb.
Jeremy Danielson was headed to Washington, D.C., on Sunday to present the technology at a Department of Energy conference. Transportation Security Administration officials shut down the airport as they believed the device was a fake bomb.
Danielson now faces a fourth-degree felony of having a facsimile or hoax bomb or explosive. The criminal complaint accuses Danielson of going to the airport "with the intent of any other person thinking it was a real explosive device."
Danielson's attorney Dan Cron told the Albuquerque Journal (http://bit.ly/2c6pqG8 ) denies that, saying Danielson has taken technical mock-ups on planes in the past.
"He never intended that anyone think it was a bomb," Cron said. "He was fully forthcoming at all times with everybody involved in the process. And I'm frankly surprised that he was charged."
Cron said Danielson knew the TSA sometimes is concerned by similar mock-ups and that as he was putting his carry-on bag on the conveyor belt for screening he told TSA workers they would need to look at it.
Sunport spokesman Dan Jiron said he hadn't read the charging documents but that he stands behind the decision to arrest Danielson.
"Certainly, the officers felt it appropriate to be able to use that statute to bring these charges against this individual," Jiron said. "There was sufficient cause for that."
Jiron said authorities knew where Danielson was headed and why, and don't dispute those facts.
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Information from: Albuquerque Journal, http://www.abqjournal.com
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BOISE, Idaho (AP) — An Idaho man will have to pay nearly $100,000 in legal fees after cutting down 19 of his neighbor's trees in a logging job.
Chief Justice of the Idaho Supreme Court Jim Jones says the ruling is legally correct but unfair to Kenneth Eyer, according to The Spokesman-Review (http://bit.ly/2cCEaSG).
The Supreme Court on Monday ordered Eyer to pay more than $95,000 in attorney fees for an unsuccessful counter-lawsuit over a 2009 logging job. Eyer logged part of his Sagle property to raise money for his wife's chemotherapy bills but inadvertently logged some of his neighbor's trees, violating Idaho's "timber trespass" laws.
Eyer's trouble started when he went to sell some of the timber on his property. Boundaries were incorrectly flagged and a neighbor's trees valued at $1,600 were sold. The neighbor sued and under Idaho state law was eligible for triple damages. The Eyers settled for $50,000, to be paid out of the couple's estate after they die.
The Eyers countersued Idaho Forest Group, the logging company that mismarked the boundary and cut down the offending trees, and continued that countersuit after the settlement with the neighbors. A jury ruled that Idaho Forest Group was not responsible and on Monday, the Supreme Court agreed.
Eyer's attorney, Arthur Bistline, could not be reached Monday for comment.
"I made $6,500 on the logging," said Eyer, 87, whose wife, Sally, died in January. "I'm destroyed - I'm financially destroyed over somebody else's little mistake."
Jones wrote in an opinion that the court procedures be changed to be faster and to reduce the cost of litigation so someone like Eyer won't face such high costs in the future.
"It appears to me that the legal system catastrophically failed Kenneth and Sally Eyer," Jones wrote in his opinion.
Eyer said he is glad to hear someone in the justice system agrees he has been dealt a rough hand, but that it doesn't help.
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Information from: The Spokesman-Review, http://www.spokesman.com
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WAPATO, Wash. (AP) — The director of a Yakima County farm says several dogs attacked and killed five of the farm's petting zoo animals.
Campbell Farm director Carmanita Pimms says staff made the grisly discovery Monday morning. The attack left three goats, a pig and a miniature horse dead. A donkey was also mauled but survived.
The Herald-Republic reports that (http://goo.gl/icLjgj ) three dogs were still in the corral when Yakima County animal control officers responded. The officers shot and killed two of the dogs, a pit bull and a German shepherd. A third dog was not shot because it did not appear threatening.
The dogs did not have microchips, tags or other identifying information.
The 40-acre farm and retreat center is located in Wapato, about 15 miles south of Yakima.
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Information from: Yakima Herald-Republic, http://www.yakimaherald.com
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LOS ANGELES (AP) — A member of a ring that burglarized the homes of Lindsey Lohan and other celebrities has pleaded guilty to stalking in a separate case — after a judge tossed out a more serious charge of solicitation to commit rape.
The Los Angeles Times reports (http://lat.ms/2cKuFwG ) Nicholas Prugo and another man, Edward Feinstein, pleaded guilty Monday to one misdemeanor count each of stalking. Prosecutors say the pair's target was Dawn Daluise, a once-prominent Los Angeles skin-care specialist.
A jury acquitted Daluise last year of attempting to have a business rival killed.
Both Prugo and Feinstein are scheduled to be sentenced Oct. 24.
Prugo spent a year in prison for being part of the so-called Bling Ring burglary crew accused of stealing jewelry and designer apparel from the homes of celebrities.
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Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com/
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FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) — The Fairbanks North Star Borough Assembly is set to vote on whether to reconsider a proposed moratorium on pot cafes in the city of Fairbanks.
The assembly in August placed a moratorium on cannabis cafes until mid-November, but it only applied in borough cities outside of Fairbanks. In a vote last week, the assembly rejected a measure that would have extended the moratorium to include Fairbanks.
Assemblyman Matt Cooper, who voted against the extension, has filed for reconsideration of the proposal. He cited concerns about how the assembly would react if the Alaska Marijuana Control Board approves regulations for on-site consumption at its meeting next month.
The borough has been holding off on establishing planning and zoning rules for pot cafes until the state sets its own regulations. The borough's Department of Community Planning is rejecting plans for retail stores with on-site consumption because state regulations have not yet been finalized, The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported (http://bit.ly/2cJoDfR ).
The assembly will decide on whether to take up the issue of the proposed pot cafe moratorium in Fairbanks later this month.
"It makes sense to take the opportunity to be cautious," Cooper said. "We are on the cutting edge of on-site consumption."
Cannabis cafes are not allowed to operate in any other state.
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Information from: Fairbanks (Alaska) Daily News-Miner, http://www.newsminer.com
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AUBURN, Calif. (AP) — Authorities say they have arrested a California Highway Patrol officer on suspicion of transmitting child pornography.
The Placer County Sheriff's Office says 54-year-old Patrick Francis Cooney Jr. was arrested by sheriff's detectives Monday at his home in Auburn. Deputies say his home was searched and electronic devices seized under a search warrant as part of an ongoing investigation.
He was booked into Placer County Jail and his bail set at $50,000.
No telephone number was listed for Cooney and officials could not immediately say if he has an attorney.
The CHP says Cooney has been put on paid administrative leave and his peace officer powers have been revoked.
The Placer County District Attorney's Office says it is reviewing his case. His next court date is October 24.
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BOZEMAN, Mont. (AP) — The Bozeman School District may have to eliminate some bus routes due to a shortage of drivers.
The Bozeman Daily Chronicle reports (http://bit.ly/2cl1Bv6 ) deputy superintendent for operations Steve Johnson told the school board on Monday that the district has no drivers for nine of its 47 routes.
First Student location manager Doug Kellie says the company offers signing bonuses and has increased starting wages from $12.25 to $14 an hour, but the low unemployment rate makes it hard to find new drivers. Current drivers are leaving for full-time work because they need more money.
School districts must provide bus service for students who live 3 miles away from school. Johnson says the district may have to eliminate bus service for middle school students that live 2 miles away and elementary students that live 1.5 miles from school.
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Information from: Bozeman Daily Chronicle, http://www.bozemandailychronicle.com
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FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — A former Clovis resident will receive $650,000 to settle a federal civil-rights lawsuit against the Clovis Police Department.
The Fresno Bee reports (http://bit.ly/2c7YT0i ) that 24-year-old George Macias Jr. had accused four police officers of beating him while he was handcuffed during a September 2012 incident. Before the settlement, police contended that Macias initiated the fight and put the officers' lives in danger by resisting arrest.
Macias was found not guilty of resisting arrest in connection to the incident.
The settlement, which Macias accepted on Friday, comes two months after a judge ruled that Macias and his attorney were entitled to confidential police documents about one of the officers involved.
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Information from: The Fresno Bee, http://www.fresnobee.com
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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Lawyers for former Utah doctor Martin MacNeill, accused of drugging his beauty queen wife and leaving her to drown in a bathtub, are scheduled to appeal his conviction Tuesday before the Utah Court of Appeals.
MacNeill contends he was convicted on "the frailest of circumstantial evidence." His attorneys say key testimony from a former cellmate was tainted by the fact he was given a benefit in return.
Prosecutors counter there was enough evidence to convict the 60-year-old MacNeill even without testimony from the cellmate. They say there is solid evidence that MacNeill dosed his wife with prescription drugs after hounding her to get a facelift, then swiftly introduced his mistress.
MacNeill is serving at least 17 years and up to life in prison in the 2007 death of his wife, Michele.
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) — Rocky Mountain National Park is on track to have another record-setting year for visitation.
The Coloradoan reports (http://noconow.co/2cSUXgQ ) that the park has welcomed more than 3 million visitors this year, a nearly 8 percent increase from the same time last year.
The park has broken visitation records every month of 2016 so far, and it's on pace to beat out the annual record of more than 4 million visitors set in 2015.
Rocky Mountain spokesman Kyle Patterson attributes the growth to the increasing population of Colorado's Front Range, a boost in the economy and reduced gas prices.
Patterson is encouraging people to visit the park to watch the annual elk rut, in which elk battle each other during mating season from mid-September through mid-October.
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Information from: Fort Collins Coloradoan, http://www.coloradoan.com
CABAZON, Calif. (AP) — A man in a stolen semitrailer rig has been arrested after a three-hour chase through the desert east of Los Angeles.
The man parked in a rest spot and peacefully surrendered around 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Riverside County community of Whitewater.
The rig reportedly was taken from a Barstow hotel as the driver slept.
Authorities say the chase began around 10:30 a.m. in Apple Valley. With CHP officers in pursuit, the truck went through the Cajon Pass and along various freeways, sometimes at a snail's pace.
The driver told CHP officials by phone that he didn't want to go back to jail.
The truck is owned by hazardous waste hauler ACT Enviro. Company President Walter Singer tells the Los Angeles Times (http://lat.ms/2c8TPJ4 ) that no hazardous materials were aboard.
DENVER (AP) — A 21-year-old custodian with a suburban Denver school district has been charged with sending nude photos of himself to a 13-year-old female student.
Authorities say Jacob David Deal is charged with internet sexual exploitation of a child.
Deal has been suspended from his job as a janitor at an elementary school and a middle school in Jefferson County.
The Jefferson County Sheriff's Office says Deal was arrested Monday after a girl in the middle school reported receiving nude photos of Deal on Aug. 26.
Deal is being held at the Jefferson County jail. Bail has been set at $25,000.
Deal did not yet have an attorney Tuesday.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Police say a man is under arrest after pretending to be a U.S. Marshal to try and avoid paying two escorts.
Authorities said Monday that Joel Graf hired the women to dance for him and a teenage boy at a hotel room in Provo, but when they finished he didn't want to pay.
Provo police say the women went to a bathroom to change early Sunday morning and when they returned he was holding a gun and a badge.
Police say the man told them he was a U.S. Marshal and he'd arrest them if they didn't leave without pay.
Graf was arrested on suspicion of impersonating a law enforcement officer as well as alcohol and weapon charges.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Two Los Angeles police officers have been charged with covering up a drunken driving accident and lying on their report.
The Los Angeles Times reports (http://lat.ms/2cq4xZ1 ) the officers pleaded not guilty last week to felony charges of conspiracy and filing a false report. Each faces up to three years in jail if convicted.
About two years ago, the officers were sent to Boyle Heights, where a drunken driver had hit two parked cars.
Prosecutors say the officers decided not to conduct an investigation and wrote a report that said the driver had fled the scene.
In fact, prosecutors say the officers put the man in their patrol car, drove him to his apartment and told him to get some sleep.
The driver was never charged with a crime.
___
Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com/
ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — A Los Alamos National Laboratory employee is facing felony charges after security officials at the Albuquerque International Sunport thought a mock-up of a technical apparatus was a bomb.
Jeremy Danielson was headed to Washington, D.C., on Sunday to present the technology at a Department of Energy conference. Transportation Security Administration officials shut down the airport as they believed the device was a fake bomb.
Danielson now faces a fourth-degree felony of having a facsimile or hoax bomb or explosive. The criminal complaint accuses Danielson of going to the airport "with the intent of any other person thinking it was a real explosive device."
Danielson's attorney Dan Cron told the Albuquerque Journal (http://bit.ly/2c6pqG8 ) denies that, saying Danielson has taken technical mock-ups on planes in the past.
"He never intended that anyone think it was a bomb," Cron said. "He was fully forthcoming at all times with everybody involved in the process. And I'm frankly surprised that he was charged."
Cron said Danielson knew the TSA sometimes is concerned by similar mock-ups and that as he was putting his carry-on bag on the conveyor belt for screening he told TSA workers they would need to look at it.
Sunport spokesman Dan Jiron said he hadn't read the charging documents but that he stands behind the decision to arrest Danielson.
"Certainly, the officers felt it appropriate to be able to use that statute to bring these charges against this individual," Jiron said. "There was sufficient cause for that."
Jiron said authorities knew where Danielson was headed and why, and don't dispute those facts.
___
Information from: Albuquerque Journal, http://www.abqjournal.com
BOISE, Idaho (AP) — An Idaho man will have to pay nearly $100,000 in legal fees after cutting down 19 of his neighbor's trees in a logging job.
Chief Justice of the Idaho Supreme Court Jim Jones says the ruling is legally correct but unfair to Kenneth Eyer, according to The Spokesman-Review (http://bit.ly/2cCEaSG).
The Supreme Court on Monday ordered Eyer to pay more than $95,000 in attorney fees for an unsuccessful counter-lawsuit over a 2009 logging job. Eyer logged part of his Sagle property to raise money for his wife's chemotherapy bills but inadvertently logged some of his neighbor's trees, violating Idaho's "timber trespass" laws.
Eyer's trouble started when he went to sell some of the timber on his property. Boundaries were incorrectly flagged and a neighbor's trees valued at $1,600 were sold. The neighbor sued and under Idaho state law was eligible for triple damages. The Eyers settled for $50,000, to be paid out of the couple's estate after they die.
The Eyers countersued Idaho Forest Group, the logging company that mismarked the boundary and cut down the offending trees, and continued that countersuit after the settlement with the neighbors. A jury ruled that Idaho Forest Group was not responsible and on Monday, the Supreme Court agreed.
Eyer's attorney, Arthur Bistline, could not be reached Monday for comment.
"I made $6,500 on the logging," said Eyer, 87, whose wife, Sally, died in January. "I'm destroyed - I'm financially destroyed over somebody else's little mistake."
Jones wrote in an opinion that the court procedures be changed to be faster and to reduce the cost of litigation so someone like Eyer won't face such high costs in the future.
"It appears to me that the legal system catastrophically failed Kenneth and Sally Eyer," Jones wrote in his opinion.
Eyer said he is glad to hear someone in the justice system agrees he has been dealt a rough hand, but that it doesn't help.
___
Information from: The Spokesman-Review, http://www.spokesman.com
WAPATO, Wash. (AP) — The director of a Yakima County farm says several dogs attacked and killed five of the farm's petting zoo animals.
Campbell Farm director Carmanita Pimms says staff made the grisly discovery Monday morning. The attack left three goats, a pig and a miniature horse dead. A donkey was also mauled but survived.
The Herald-Republic reports that (http://goo.gl/icLjgj ) three dogs were still in the corral when Yakima County animal control officers responded. The officers shot and killed two of the dogs, a pit bull and a German shepherd. A third dog was not shot because it did not appear threatening.
The dogs did not have microchips, tags or other identifying information.
The 40-acre farm and retreat center is located in Wapato, about 15 miles south of Yakima.
___
Information from: Yakima Herald-Republic, http://www.yakimaherald.com
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A member of a ring that burglarized the homes of Lindsey Lohan and other celebrities has pleaded guilty to stalking in a separate case — after a judge tossed out a more serious charge of solicitation to commit rape.
The Los Angeles Times reports (http://lat.ms/2cKuFwG ) Nicholas Prugo and another man, Edward Feinstein, pleaded guilty Monday to one misdemeanor count each of stalking. Prosecutors say the pair's target was Dawn Daluise, a once-prominent Los Angeles skin-care specialist.
A jury acquitted Daluise last year of attempting to have a business rival killed.
Both Prugo and Feinstein are scheduled to be sentenced Oct. 24.
Prugo spent a year in prison for being part of the so-called Bling Ring burglary crew accused of stealing jewelry and designer apparel from the homes of celebrities.
___
Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com/
FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) — The Fairbanks North Star Borough Assembly is set to vote on whether to reconsider a proposed moratorium on pot cafes in the city of Fairbanks.
The assembly in August placed a moratorium on cannabis cafes until mid-November, but it only applied in borough cities outside of Fairbanks. In a vote last week, the assembly rejected a measure that would have extended the moratorium to include Fairbanks.
Assemblyman Matt Cooper, who voted against the extension, has filed for reconsideration of the proposal. He cited concerns about how the assembly would react if the Alaska Marijuana Control Board approves regulations for on-site consumption at its meeting next month.
The borough has been holding off on establishing planning and zoning rules for pot cafes until the state sets its own regulations. The borough's Department of Community Planning is rejecting plans for retail stores with on-site consumption because state regulations have not yet been finalized, The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported (http://bit.ly/2cJoDfR ).
The assembly will decide on whether to take up the issue of the proposed pot cafe moratorium in Fairbanks later this month.
"It makes sense to take the opportunity to be cautious," Cooper said. "We are on the cutting edge of on-site consumption."
Cannabis cafes are not allowed to operate in any other state.
___
Information from: Fairbanks (Alaska) Daily News-Miner, http://www.newsminer.com
AUBURN, Calif. (AP) — Authorities say they have arrested a California Highway Patrol officer on suspicion of transmitting child pornography.
The Placer County Sheriff's Office says 54-year-old Patrick Francis Cooney Jr. was arrested by sheriff's detectives Monday at his home in Auburn. Deputies say his home was searched and electronic devices seized under a search warrant as part of an ongoing investigation.
He was booked into Placer County Jail and his bail set at $50,000.
No telephone number was listed for Cooney and officials could not immediately say if he has an attorney.
The CHP says Cooney has been put on paid administrative leave and his peace officer powers have been revoked.
The Placer County District Attorney's Office says it is reviewing his case. His next court date is October 24.
BOZEMAN, Mont. (AP) — The Bozeman School District may have to eliminate some bus routes due to a shortage of drivers.
The Bozeman Daily Chronicle reports (http://bit.ly/2cl1Bv6 ) deputy superintendent for operations Steve Johnson told the school board on Monday that the district has no drivers for nine of its 47 routes.
First Student location manager Doug Kellie says the company offers signing bonuses and has increased starting wages from $12.25 to $14 an hour, but the low unemployment rate makes it hard to find new drivers. Current drivers are leaving for full-time work because they need more money.
School districts must provide bus service for students who live 3 miles away from school. Johnson says the district may have to eliminate bus service for middle school students that live 2 miles away and elementary students that live 1.5 miles from school.
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Information from: Bozeman Daily Chronicle, http://www.bozemandailychronicle.com
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — A former Clovis resident will receive $650,000 to settle a federal civil-rights lawsuit against the Clovis Police Department.
The Fresno Bee reports (http://bit.ly/2c7YT0i ) that 24-year-old George Macias Jr. had accused four police officers of beating him while he was handcuffed during a September 2012 incident. Before the settlement, police contended that Macias initiated the fight and put the officers' lives in danger by resisting arrest.
Macias was found not guilty of resisting arrest in connection to the incident.
The settlement, which Macias accepted on Friday, comes two months after a judge ruled that Macias and his attorney were entitled to confidential police documents about one of the officers involved.
___
Information from: The Fresno Bee, http://www.fresnobee.com
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Lawyers for former Utah doctor Martin MacNeill, accused of drugging his beauty queen wife and leaving her to drown in a bathtub, are scheduled to appeal his conviction Tuesday before the Utah Court of Appeals.
MacNeill contends he was convicted on "the frailest of circumstantial evidence." His attorneys say key testimony from a former cellmate was tainted by the fact he was given a benefit in return.
Prosecutors counter there was enough evidence to convict the 60-year-old MacNeill even without testimony from the cellmate. They say there is solid evidence that MacNeill dosed his wife with prescription drugs after hounding her to get a facelift, then swiftly introduced his mistress.
MacNeill is serving at least 17 years and up to life in prison in the 2007 death of his wife, Michele.
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