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Bonneville County man arrested on felony, misdemeanor drug charges

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Todd L. Sheetz

IDAHO FALLS — A Bonneville County man was arrested Sunday on felony and misdemeanor drug charges after police found him hiding in a storage unit.

Todd L. Sheetz, 51, was booked into the Bonneville County Jail on a felony parole violation warrant, for felony possession of methamphetamine and misdemeanor possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

Police reports show just after midnight Sunday, Bonneville County Sheriff’s deputies were called regarding individuals trespassing at a storage unit business located in the 3500 N. block of 15th E. in Bonneville County, according to a news release.

Deputies arrived and with the property owner located a female moving items from a storage unit she had been renting. During this time deputies saw items of drug paraphernalia in plain view and were told by the female that she was the only one there. However, deputies located 51-year-old Todd L. Sheetz hiding inside the unit and found he was wanted on a felony parole violation warrant and an Idaho Falls Police warrant for failure to appear.

When asked, Sheetz admitted to having a small amount of meth on his person, which was found to be approximately 2.5 grams. Deputies also used a K-9 to search the area around the unit and a vehicle belonging to Sheetz. Along with drug pipes and paraphernalia, deputies located approximately 11 grams of suspected marijuana.


Utah filmmaker who admitted to sexually abusing young girl sentenced to prison

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Courtesy KSL.com

AMERICAN FORK, Utah (KSL.com) — A prominent Utah filmmaker who previously admitted to sexually abusing a young girl several years ago will spend at least six years in prison, a judge ruled Tuesday.

Sterling Van Wagenen, 72, was sentenced to six years to life in prison on Tuesday in 4th District Court in Utah County. He is due for sentencing in a second sex abuse case, in which he also pleaded guilty, in West Jordan on July 9.

Van Wagenen, of Woodland Hills, pleaded guilty to one count of aggravated sexual abuse of a child, a first-degree felony, in April. He admitted to touching the girl inappropriately at his home between 2013 and 2015 when the girl was 7 to 9 years old.

The court recommended that parole authorities keep Van Wagenen in prison beyond the six years sentenced Tuesday, according to Deseret News reporter Annie Knox. Van Wagenen also was ordered to have no contact with the girl.

“I want the victim to know, you did the right thing and you’re not responsible for anything that happened and anything that will happen,” 4th District Judge Roger Griffin said in the courtroom. “You’re a brave young lady.”

Van Wagenen is a film producer and director whose credits include the production of the Academy Award-winning 1985 film “The Trip To Bountiful.”

Van Wagenen served as a lecturer in the Film and Media Arts department at the University of Utah, according to a biography page on the University of Utah website that was deleted earlier this year. He resigned from the university in February, according to a U. spokeswoman.

He also had a hand in co-founding the Sundance Film Festival and served as the executive director of the Sundance Institute, according to the page. He was also a professor at BYU from 1993 to 1999, the biography states.

In the second case, he was charged with touching the same girl a second time while at her family’s home in West Jordan. The abuse happened during the same time frame, from 2013 to 2015.

He pleaded guilty to one count of aggravated sexual abuse of a child in that case on May 2, according to court records.

Van Wagenen originally faced 15 years to life in prison for each count in the two cases. Prosecutors agreed to seek a lighter sentence of six years to life in exchange for his guilty plea, according to his attorney. His sentences in both cases will likely will run concurrently, the attorney said.

Van Wagenen first came under fire after an accusation surfaced earlier this year that he abused a 13-year-old boy in 1993. Sean Escobar, the accuser who is now 38, told the Deseret News and other media outlets he recorded Van Wagenen apologizing for inappropriately touching him.

Salt Lake County Sheriff’s office documents from July 1993 obtained by KSL.com state that Van Wagenen “confessed to fondling” the victim, who was a friend of Van Wagenen’s son and was sleeping over at his Holladay home, in a call to the Division of Family Services. However, he was never criminally charged in the case.

In an April 30 statement, the Sundance Institute said Van Wagenen has no current connections to the organization and has not been involved since 1993.

“Sundance Institute categorically denounces his behavior as described in recent reports, and we stand in solidarity with those whose brave truth-telling shines light on abusive behavior,” the statement said.

This article was originally published by KSL.com. It is used here with permission.

Utahn accused in ‘sextortion’ of over 50 teens, charges say

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SALT LAKE CITY (Deseret News) — A South Jordan man accused of sextortion was arrested Monday on a $500,000 warrant and then quickly made bail.

Gabe Ryan Gilbert, 19, was charged with contacting juvenile girls on social media and threatening to photo-edit nude images of them if they would not send him real nude photos.

Gilbert is charged in 3rd District Court with five counts of aggravated sexual extortion of a child, a first-degree felony, and four counts of sexual exploitation of a minor, a second-degree felony.

The investigation began in August when agents with the Internet Crimes Against Children task force learned that Gilbert had been using Snapchat to extort teenage girls, according to charging documents.

A 15-year-old girl reported to authorities that Gilbert “had threatened to photoshop images of her face onto nude photos unless she sent real nude pictures of herself,” the charges state. In one Snapchat conversation, Gilbert allegedly threatened to “expose” her if she didn’t send a picture in one minute.

When investigators looked into Gilbert’s Snapchat account, in which he was using an alias, “it was obvious the user had been engaging in very similar behavior with other underage girls. I identified well over 50 potential victims of this type of sexual extortion,” investigators with the Utah Attorney General’s Office wrote in the charges.

Agents went to Gilbert’s home in March only to find out that he was serving a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Mexico, and had left about two months after the alleged extortion attempt involving the 15-year-old, according to charging documents.

In April, “I was contacted by an attorney for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He stated the same day I spoke with (Gilbert’s mom) about this case … she contacted the mission president and explained we had asked to speak with Gabe. The mission president called Gabe in and interviewed him. What Gabe said was not disclosed, but he was immediately sent home,” the charges state.

When investigators returned to the Gilbert home, his parents refused to tell them where Gilbert was or talk to them without a lawyer, according to the court documents.

“I told her Gabe was an adult and was free to decline to speak with me, but she cannot hide him,” an agent wrote.

Gilbert also allegedly pressured a girlfriend into sending nude photos of herself in 2017 when he was 17 and she was 15. She had already sent some photos and was reluctant to send more, but Gilbert “threatened to expose her and distribute the images she had already sent him unless she sent him more photos,” the charges state.

In May 2018, Gilbert pressured a girl, believed to be between 14 and 16 years old, into sending explicit videos of herself, the charges state. He “aggressively threatened a Snapchat user that he would ruin her life by exposing her nude photos. He continued to repeat these threats while telling the user to record nude videos of herself and send them to him,” according to the charges.

Investigators say he also threatened to “expose” a 16-year-old girl in June 2018 by sending pictures to her grandmother, and also threatened a 14-year-old girl the same month.

“His messages included threats to send rapists and human traffickers to her house,” agents wrote in the charges. When the girl replied that she was not scared of Gilbert, he allegedly “sent four screenshots of (her) exact location, down to an image of her house.”

Charging documents list three other underage girls that Gilbert threatened to photo-edit nude images on their faces if they did not send real nude selfies, according to charging documents.

Investigators requested that should Gilbert make bail that he not be allowed to access any electronic devices.

This article was originally published in the Deseret News. It is used here with permission. Subscribe to the paper here.

Man arrested for assaulting police officer, resisting arrest

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Brandon Warren

IDAHO FALLS — An Afton, Wyoming man has been charged with assaulting a police officer and resisting arrest.

Brandon Warren, 39, was arrested and booked into the Bonneville County Jail after 11 p.m. Thursday.

Police reports show Idaho Falls Police officers responded to a reported assault near the Idaho Falls Power Plant on Sunnyside Road. Warren had reportedly shoved a man and attempted to hit him but left the area before officers arrived.

A string of people told officers that a male with the same description had passed them crawling around and acting aggressive towards them and others, according to a IFPD news release. Officers followed reports about the man from the power plant to the Maverik gas station on the 3200 block of South Yellowstone.

There, Warren was found being detained by a citizen after trying to fight with other people.

Warren had an outstanding warrant for his arrest and began kicking and fighting with officers when they tried to apprehend him. After being transported to jail he continued to fight with jail staff.

He was charged with felony assault or battery of an officer and misdemeanor resisting arrest. Warren’s criminal record includes previous resisting arrest and disturbing the peace charges in 2016, and obscene conduct in 2011.

Warren was given a $20,000 bond. He is due in court again on July 16.

Police: Utah mom put 4-year-old in hot car as punishment, admitted to using drugs

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Jesica Lee Brown

DRAPER, Utah (KSTU) — A woman was booked into jail and faces felony charges after police said she put her 4-year-old boy in a hot car as punishment.

Police also said the child was sitting within reach of a needle the woman had used to inject heroin.

A statement of probable cause indicates police were called to do a welfare check at Draper City Park on July 2 around 9 p.m. after someone reported a young boy was being held in “time out” inside of a vehicle.

The officers noted it was 82 degrees outside at the time and said the child’s mother, 28-year-old Jesica Lee Brown, told officers she had put the boy inside with the windows up and the car turned off because he was “acting out.”

One officer felt the boy’s head, which was hot to the touch, and noted he was sweating and had puffy eyes.

Brown told officers she had used methamphetamine and heroin, the document states. Police located a used syringe needle inside of a purse that was inside the car with the boy. Officers located various paraphernalia associated with heroin use during that same search.

The woman was booked into jail and faces charges of child abuse and child endangerment.

The child was given into the care of relatives.

This article was originally published by KSTU. It is used here with permission.

Billionaire Jeffrey Epstein arrested and accused of sex trafficking minors, sources say

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(CNN) — Florida-based billionaire Jeffrey Epstein has been indicted on new charges related to alleged sex crimes involving minors, law enforcement sources told CNN on Saturday.

Epstein was arrested Saturday and is expected to appear in federal court in New York on Monday.

Epstein faces charges brought by US prosecutors in Manhattan, after previously evading similar charges when he secured a non-prosecution deal with federal prosecutors in Miami.

The charges, contained in a sealed indictment, involve alleged sex trafficking crimes committed between 2002 and 2005, according to law enforcement sources. The indictment alleged that the crimes occurred in both New York and Palm Beach, Florida.

A team of federal prosecutors from the Southern District of New York, along with some in the public corruption unit, have been assigned to the case.

Maurene Comey, the daughter of former FBI director James Comey, is one of the prosecutors, according to a source with knowledge of the case.

CNN has reached out to Epstein’s lawyer.

The arrest was first reported by the Daily Beast.

In November, the Miami Herald reported that when Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta was a US attorney in Florida, he gave Epstein the “deal of a lifetime.” In a sweeping review of the politically connected billionaire’s case, the Herald explained how Acosta had made an agreement with Epstein to avoid major repercussions for the hedge fund manager, even though a federal investigation had identified 36 underage victims.

The report said Acosta had brokered a deal with one of Epstein’s attorneys, where he pleaded in 2008 to two state prostitution charges, ultimately serving only 13 months and avoiding a federal trial. He also registered as a sex offender and paid restitution to the victims identified by the FBI.

The agreement, the Herald said, “essentially shut down an ongoing FBI probe” and further granted immunity to “any potential co-conspirators” in the case.

Acosta told CNN in February that he welcomed an investigation by Justice Department’s Office of Professional Responsibility into his handling of Epstein’s plea agreement.

Acosta also denied any wrongdoing.

Two months earlier, Epstein settled a separate lawsuit that could have allowed for several of his accusers to tell their stories in open court.

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™ & © 2019 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.

Man arrested for felony DUI blew three and a half times legal limit, deputies say

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The following is a news release from the Bonneville County Sheriff’s Office.

On July 5, at approximately 5:40 p.m., Bonneville County Sheriff deputies in the Ammon Division responded to an injury crash at the intersection of Ammon Road and 17th Street.

Witnesses advised one of the vehicles involved was a GMC pickup that was observed swerving just prior to the crash. Witnesses told deputies the male fell to the ground after exiting his vehicle and they began attending to him until deputies arrived.

Deputies identified the male as 67-year-old Ronald G. Nieweg of Idaho Falls and, while talking to him, found that he showed signs of impairment along with an opened bottle of liquor in his vehicle. Nieweg was checked by ambulance personnel and transported to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center accompanied by a deputy.

After medical clearance, deputies transported Nieweg to the Bonneville County Jail for breath testing to determine the level of alcohol in his system. Breath testing results showed Nieweg at approximately .28 BAC, which is three and a half times the legal limit of .08.

Nieweg was then booked into the Bonneville County Jail for felony excessive driving under the influence and misdemeanor possession of an open container of liquor.

Man arrested for attempted strangulation, drug charges

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Derek Drussel | Madison County Jail

REXBURG — A man was arrested Saturday on charges of felony attempted strangulation and misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia and malicious injury to property.

Derek Drussel, 24, was booked into the Madison County Jail after the Rexburg Police Department received a call from his neighbors that he and a woman were fighting.

“He left in a vehicle and our officers were able to stop him,” Capt. Gary Hagen tells EastIdahoNews.com. “We interviewed the victim and she advised that he had tried to choke her and broke her phone.”

Hagen says the woman had marks on her neck consistent with the injuries. Drussel also admitted to having drug paraphernalia.

If convicted, Drussel could spend up to 15 years in prison. He is expected to make his first court appearance Monday in Madison County.


Man sentenced to probation for having sex with 17-year-old

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Johnnie Junior Huddleston

IDAHO FALLS — A local man won’t spend any time in prison for sexually abusing a 17-year-old girl.

Johnnie Junior Huddleston, 24, was sentenced to 10 years of felony probation and will have to register as a sex offender. He had previously pleaded guilty to sexual battery of a minor as part of a plea agreement.

Bonneville County Chief Deputy Prosecutor John Dewey told EastIdahoNews.com that as part of the agreement, the prosecution and defense agreed to the felony probation recommended by Huddleston’s pre-sentencing investigation. Dewey said the victim and her family also approved of the felony probation recommendation.

Prosecutors argued for 10 years of probation, while defense attorneys argued for five years. District Judge Dane Watkins sentenced Huddleston to the full 10 years.

The case revolved around an incident in March 2018 where a friend of Huddleston and the victim observed them having sex in a car. While the victim initially claimed it was a forceful rape, the friend told police that there was no sign she was under duress. Huddleston claimed the sex was consensual and denied raping the victim. He also said he thought the victim was 19-years-old.

The incident was reported to police and Huddleston was arrested in August. He was charged with sexual battery of a minor since under Idaho law a minor cannot consent to sex with an adult.

In addition to the probation sentence, Huddleston also spent some 10 months in jail during the court proceedings.

Motorcyclist arrested after police find explosive device, 3 guns, hatchet and several knives

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The following is a news release from the Idaho Falls Police Department. Photo: Jonathan Solberg | Bonneville County Jail

IDAHO FALLS — On Saturday, July 6 at 1:28 a.m., Idaho Falls Police Dispatch received a call advising that a car driving westbound on 17th Street was being chased by a person on a motorcycle. While officers were in route, the caller relayed that the car had turned south onto Yellowstone Highway and that the motorcycle rider was shooting a firearm at the vehicle.

Officers located the vehicle near the intersection of Burgraff and Yellowstone. The vehicle had reportedly been traveling at a high rate of speed and crashed into a borrow pit next to the railroad tracks on the east side of Yellowstone Highway.

EMS personnel from the Idaho Falls Fire Department also responded and evaluated the driver and two passengers in the vehicle. The driver of the vehicle was transported via ambulance to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in stable condition. Both passengers were evaluated on scene by EMS personnel but not transported.

An officer enroute to the location of the accident was able to locate and stop the motorcyclist, who had been involved, near Sunnyside Road and Holmes Avenue. The driver, Jonathan Solberg, was found in possession of three handguns, a hatchet, and several knives, which were all on his person.

An IFPD K9 Officer arrived and conducted a free air sniff of the motorcycle with his K9. After the K9
positively indicated on the motorcycle, officers conducted a search and found a cylindrical object that officers believed could be an explosive device.

Members of the Idaho Falls Regional Bomb Squad responded to the scene and were able to confirm that it was, in fact, an explosive device. Bomb Squad personnel took possession of the item for safe disposal.

Jonathan Solberg, a 32-year-old Idaho Falls Resident, was arrested for felony unlawful possession of an explosive/destructive device and exhibition/brandishing of a deadly weapon. He was taken to the Bonneville County Jail.

A passenger of the vehicle, Matthew Hearney, a 34-year-old male, had two outstanding warrants and was also arrested and transported to the Bonneville County Jail.

Teenager arrested for allegedly stabbing his mother multiple times

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IDAHO FALLS — A teenage boy has been arrested and booked into the 3B Detention & Treatment Center for allegedly stabbing his mother multiple times.

Idaho Falls Police were called to a home on the south end of the city early Wednesday morning for a report that a 37-year-old woman had been stabbed.

When officers arrived, a 13-year-old boy was taken into custody. His mother was transported to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center by ambulance, according to police, and family members say she was then flown by air ambulance to a hospital in Utah.

Charges of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon are pending against the teenager, according to Idaho Falls Police spokeswoman Jessica Clements.

“This is an ongoing, open investigation and because a juvenile is involved, no further information will be released,” Clements tells EastIdahoNews.com. “There is no threat to the general public.”

At this time, EastIdahoNews.com has chosen not to identify the suspect or victim in this case. An online fundraiser set up for the victim says she will require “weeks if not months of therapy to regain full strength which will require her to stay in Utah.”

A motive for the stabbing has not been released.

Man charged with voyeurism after admitting to hiding camera in bathroom

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Guy A. Roundy | Jefferson County Jail

JEFFERSON COUNTY — A Monteview man is facing a felony charge after he admitted to hiding a camera in a bathroom and videotaping people naked, according to court documents.

Guy A. Roundy, 34, is charged with felony video voyeurism.

According to court documents obtained by EastIdahoNews.com, Roundy contacted deputies with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office on Thursday, saying he wanted to turn himself in. During the phone call with a deputy, Roundy said he videotaped people taking showers at his home. He told the deputy he knew it was wrong and wanted to know if he could turn himself in on Friday.

Deputies drove to the home to speak with the victims, who turned over a camera to investigators, according to court documents. A deputy took the camera’s SD card as evidence and spoke with one of the victims.

“She showed me a wall hanging with multi-colored flowers and pointed to a blank spot in the flowers and told me the camera was in there,” a deputy wrote in his report. “She also said there was a different angle in the camera that appeared to be on top of the medicine cabinet facing the shower.”

Deputies attempted to locate Roundy at the home on Thursday but were unable to find him.

The next day Roundy went to the sheriff’s office and spoke with a deputy. He reportedly said he “had a problem with pornography for some time” and admitted to putting the camera in the bathroom.

Roundy was arrested for voyeurism and booked him into the Jefferson County Jail. He appeared in court for his arraignment and is scheduled for another hearing on July 22.

Magistrate Judge Robert L. Crowley released Roundy on pre-trial services without having to post bond. Roundy’s pre-trial release stipulates he not have contact with the potential victims in the case.

Judge calls murders ‘heinous’ before sentencing former Pocatello police officer to life in prison

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NAMPA (Idaho Statesman) — The former police officer convicted of brutally killing his parents in 2017 will spend the rest of his life in prison.

Canyon County District Judge Gene Petty sentenced William “Willie” Taylor on Tuesday to life in prison without the possibility of parole after a jury convicted him of first-degree murder, second-degree murder and two felony counts of failing to report a death.

Taylor, 50, was convicted after a May trial of killing his father, Paul Robert Taylor, 76, and his mother, Mary Jane “Jane” Taylor, 77, in September 2017.

The gruesome killings took place at the Nampa home where the victims and the suspect lived, in the 1900 block of West Flamingo Avenue. Police found the couple’s bodies wrapped in a tarp and stuffed in a shed next to their carport.

Taylor fled in his father’s pickup to Oregon, where police apprehended him.

The prosecution asked that the judge impose a life sentence without the possibility of parole, while the defense argued that Taylor should be given the opportunity of parole because this was his first felony conviction.

“He is capable of the worst kind of betrayal and violence,” argued Canyon County deputy prosecutor Ellie Somoza.

Taylor was a Pocatello police officer from October 1991 through December 1996, the Nampa Police Department previously reported. He served in the NPD reserve in 1990 and 1991. He was also a probation officer and a teacher, according to the defense.

Taylor declined to make a statement before the sentence was issued.

Defense attorney Ryan Dowell appealed for parole to be an option, even if Taylor had to serve a 10-year mandatory minimum, but the judge disagreed.

“It is very clear that you killed your parents, but yet you have failed to take any responsibility for killing them,” Petty told Taylor before issuing his sentence.

He noted that the exact motive still remains unclear.

“The way that you killed your parents was very brutal,” Petty said in court. “…You stabbed your mother repeatedly. You attacked your father while he was in his bed. You tried to clean up the crime scene. You left their bodies to rot at their home and you fled to Oregon. These were heinous, cruel and intentional killings.”

Petty ordered Taylor to serve a fixed life sentence for each murder count, plus five years for each count of failing to report a death.

“I find that due to the nature of these murders, that you should spend the rest of your life behind bars,” Petty said. “… I do not do this lightly. I give you this sentence because it is the most appropriate sentence for these murders.”

Man dies after fleeing from police, crashing into RV

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The following is a news release from Idaho State Police.

On Tuesday, July 9, at approximately 5:53 p.m., Idaho State Police investigated a fatality crash on Ross Fork Road near Interstate 15, in Fort Hall.

Alrenzo Quagigant, 56, of Firth, was pulled over by the Fort Hall Police Department on Ross Fork Road (also known as Simplot Road) just east of Interstate 15. Quagigant initially stopped, and then left the scene of the traffic stop, fleeing from police westbound.

Prior to the interchange with I-15, Fort Hall Police officers discontinued their pursuit of Quagigant. Quagigant continued west, across the overpass of I-15, where he collided with a 2004 Holiday Rambler RV. Quagigant lost control of his vehicle, ran off the road and overturned, coming to rest on its top.

Quagigant was pronounced deceased at the scene of the crash. He was not wearing a seat belt. The driver of the RV was, Curtis Goodwin, 71, of West Haven, Utah. Goodwin and his passengers were not injured in the crash. Alcohol was involved in this crash.

New alleged victim of Jeffrey Epstein says he raped her when she was 15

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(CNN) — “I was terrified and I was telling him to stop, please stop.”

Jennifer Araoz says that’s what she told Jeffrey Epstein as he raped her when she was 15 years old.

Araoz told NBC’s “Today” show in an interview aired Wednesday that she started going to Epstein’s Manhattan home when she was 14 years old, and gave him massages dressed only in her underwear.

“I was 14 years old, what the hell do you know when you’re that young?” Araoz asked.

The encounters began after a woman Araoz called a “recruiter” talked to her outside her school in meetings that spanned over a year.

She said “that he (Epstein) was just a great guy,” and that he could probably help Araoz with her career.

When she first began visiting Epstein’s home, Araoz said he was very nice and told her he’d heard a lot about her. She was served wine, she said, even though he knew her age. “I don’t think he cared,” she said.

She went to his home once or twice a week, Araoz said. After each visit, she said, she was given $300, and the visits eventually began to include massages.

There were several sexually suggestive items in Epstein’s home, Araoz said, including “prosthetic breasts he could play with while he was taking a bath, it was very odd.”

Next to the massage table was a painting of a nude woman who Epstein said resembled Araoz.

She says she wasn’t completely comfortable with the massage sessions, but she was “afraid he would get angry” with her if she didn’t do as asked.

After the massages ended, she told NBC, he would turn over, “finish himself off and that would be the end of it.”

After about a year, Epstein asked Araoz to take off her underwear and get on top of him, she said.

“I said I didn’t want to … he kind of very forcefully brought me to the table and I did what he wanted,” she said.

“I was terrified and I was telling him to stop, please stop,” but he didn’t, she said. She didn’t recognize what happened as rape at the time, Araoz said.

“I thought it was my fault, I thought I was obligated. I didn’t know better.”

Araoz said she never went back after that, even though Epstein’s staff continued to reach out to her. She even stopped attending her school, which was in the same neighborhood as Epstein’s home.

“I didn’t want that to happen again.”

Araoz has filed a petition and has announced her intention to file a lawsuit against Epstein. The earliest she can file is August 14, when a new law takes effect allowing adult survivors of child sexual abuse one year to sue their abuser or a negligent institution for offenses in New York, no matter how long ago the abuse took place.

She said she feels guilty she didn’t alert authorities earlier about what happened.

“Maybe he wouldn’t have done it to other girls,” she said. “I was too scared, I didn’t want to go public with it.”

Araoz’s account is similar to the stories of other women who have come forward with allegations against Epstein.

NBC reported that Araoz told her mother, her then-boyfriend and two close friends several years ago about the encounters.

Kimberly Lerner, one of Araoz’s attorneys, told CNN Wednesday her client didn’t know there were other Epstein victims until her ex-boyfriend sent her an article about it in 2008. That’s the same year Epstein secured a non-prosecution deal with federal prosecutors in Miami and pleaded guilty to two state prostitution charges, serving just 13 months in prison. He also registered as a sex offender and paid restitution to the victims identified by the FBI.

CNN has reached out to Epstein’s lawyers for comment about the latest allegations but has not yet heard back.

Epstein indicted for sex trafficking

Epstein was indicted Monday for allegedly running a trafficking enterprise between 2002 and 2005 in which he paid hundreds of dollars in cash to girls as young as 14 to have sex with him at his Upper East Side home and his estate in Palm Beach. The court documents said Epstein worked with employees and associates to lure the girls to his residences and paid some of his victims to recruit other girls for him to abuse.

Epstein, 66, was arrested Saturday night at Teterboro Airport in New Jersey aboard his private jet upon returning from Paris.

Later that evening, federal agents executing a search warrant of Epstein’s mansion in New York City seized a “vast trove” of lewd photographs of young-looking women or girls, prosecutors said in a court filing.

He is charged with one count of sex trafficking of minors and one count of conspiracy to engage in sex trafficking of minors. He faces up to 45 years in prison if convicted of both counts.

Epstein pleaded not guilty to the charges in Manhattan federal court on Monday afternoon during one of two proceedings.

US District Court Judge Richard Berman ordered Epstein’s bail hearing postponed until July 15 to allow his defense lawyers time to file a written bail proposal. Epstein is being held at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, a federal detention center in lower Manhattan.

His 2008 deal with federal prosecutors came under intense scrutiny last November in a Miami Herald investigation that examined how it was handled by then-US Attorney Alexander Acosta, who now serves as labor secretary in President Donald Trump’s Cabinet.

Araoz’s story part of the ‘MeToo’ movement

Lerner told CNN that Araoz’s decision to come forward now is a “continuation of the ‘MeToo’ movement.”

“Victims are no longer feeling ashamed … We’re getting to a point where people are no longer saying, ‘You asked for it’ and … blaming the victims. We’re getting to point where we’re starting to blame society for allowing predators to prey,” the attorney said.

She also noted that wealth seemed to change things in cases like this, and said Epstein had high-powered friends, such as Bill Clinton.

“These people knew something was wrong with him. Think about it — if this guy (Epstein) had no money, they’d think, ‘This guy’s a perv.’ We see that with power and wealth all the time.”

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74-year-old sentenced for attacking neighbor with axe

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The following is a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Idaho.

COEUR D’ALENE — Otto Mark Homan, 74, of Lapwai, was sentenced yesterday to 46 months in federal prison for assault with a dangerous weapon and assault resulting in serious bodily injury, U.S. Attorney Bart M. Davis announced. Chief U.S. District Judge David C. Nye also ordered Homan to serve three years supervised release after he is finished serving his prison term. Homan was indicted by a federal grand jury on Oct. 16, 2018.

According to court records, Homan walked to his neighbor’s house. He attacked the victim with a hammer/axe by hitting him once in the head. Homan then left. Homan, who was intoxicated at the time, mistakenly believed the victim had stolen his television. The victim suffered life-threatening injuries and spent over three months in various medical care facilities.

This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Nez Perce Tribal Police.

Idaho man sentenced for posting ads seeking minors for sex and ‘porn production

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A Meridian man was sentenced to 10 years in prison Wednesday for attempted coercion and enticement of a minor after he posted ads on Craigslist for “porn productions” and offered to exchange money for sex with underage girls, according to a press release from United State Attorney Bart Davis’ office.

Vincent Paul Ingolia, 45, pleaded guilty on April 10. The Idaho Statesman reports he will be placed on five years of supervised release after his prison term and will have to register as a sex offender.

Ingolia posted an ad on March 18, 2018, seeking sexual activity from an underage girl. An undercover Homeland Security Investigations agent responded, and the two shared correspondence. Ingolia offered money for sex and agreed to meet at a Boise gas station. Upon meeting, Ingolia believed the person he was speaking with was an officer, and he fled the scene, officials said.

Upon further research, authorities found that at least 10 other ads had been posted by Ingolia. A search warrant was executed in August 2018, and he admitted to authorities that he communicated with minors previously via Craigslist and that he fled the scene in March because he thought he was speaking with an officer, according to the press release.

Ingolia said he never actually met or had sex with minors, the release said.

Man stabbed father multiple times after getting angry, police say

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Michael Anthony McCusker | Bonneville County Jail

IDAHO FALLS — An Idaho Falls man pleaded not guilty Monday after police say he called 911 claiming he stabbed his father multiple times.

Michael Anthony McCusker, 27, is charged with felony aggravated battery with use of a deadly weapon, after the June 6 incident on the 2000 block of Woodbridge Circle.

According to court documents obtained by EastIdahoNews.com, the Idaho Falls Police Department received a 911 call around 10:30 p.m. from McCusker saying he just stabbed his father. When police rushed to the scene, the victim was driven to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in a private vehicle.

Officers arrived and McCusker was still on the phone with 911 who told him to walk outside. The officer placed McCusker into handcuffs, noticing he had lacerations on his right hand. An ambulance treated him on the scene, according to court documents.

“As I was standing with him, he said he made a huge mistake, gotten mad and just started stabbing him,” an officer wrote in his report. “He repeatedly told me without being asked he had gotten mad and stabbed him.”

Documents say when police entered the home, they noted blood on the kitchen floor and laundry area of the house. Investigators at the scene recovered the knife McCusker allegedly used in the stabbing.

The victim underwent surgery for his injuries but court documents do not specify what those injuries are.

Officers took McCusker to EIRMC for stitches on his hand before transporting him to the Bonneville County Jail, where he is held on $25,000 bail.

A jury trial is scheduled for Sept. 4 at the Bonneville County Courthouse. If convicted, he could spend up to 15 years in prison for the alleged crime.

Boise woman arrested after allegedly leaving 3 children, including infant, in hot car

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BOISE (Idaho Statesman) — A Boise woman was arrested and charged with three counts of felony injury to a child after she allegedly left her three children, including an infant, alone in a hot vehicle.

According to a press release from the Boise Police Department, Sauda Cyizanye, 27, left her children in a car in a parking lot on the 8200 block of West Fairview Avenue for about 20 minutes while she went into a store. The vehicle had its windows partially down, the engine off and the doors unlocked, the release said. The children were believed to be an 11-year-old, a 1-year-old and a 1-month-old.

Police said they arrived after the situation was reported and noticed the children sweating but not in other distress. The mother came out of the store before paramedics arrived, was investigated and later arrested.

Paramedics determined that the children were OK, and the three were placed with another family member.

This article was originally published in the Idaho Statesman. It is used here with permission.

Former Idaho GOP chairman faces new unlawful entry charge in addition to stalking, trespass

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Former Idaho GOP chair Jonathan Parker was taken into custody on an outstanding warrant after a court appearance on a felony stalking charge on June 14, 2019. | Katherine Jones, Idaho Statesman

BOISE (Idaho Statesman)– Former Idaho GOP chairman and lobbyist Jonathan Parker now has three pending criminal charges.

The latest charge, misdemeanor unlawful entry, stems from Parker allegedly entering a woman’s Meridian home without her consent. Parker pleaded not guilty to that charge on July 3, marking his third court appearance on three separate charges over the course of about one month.

Parker resigned from his GOP post Feb. 18, with more than two years left in his term.

Since then, Parker’s wife has filed for divorce, and he has been charged with, and bonded out, on two misdemeanors and one felony. The misdemeanor unlawful entry charge stems from an interaction with a different woman.

According to court records:

  • March 26: Parker’s wife, Kelly, filed for divorce in Ada County. The divorce proceedings are pending and sealed.
  • April 10: Parker allegedly looked into a door or window at an apartment complex on the 300 block of North Whitewater Park Boulevard, the same complex in which his estranged wife lived.
  • April 26: Parker allegedly entered a home in Meridian without the resident’s consent.
  • May 16 to 30: Parker allegedly stalked and harassed his estranged wife.
  • May 30: Boise police arrest Parker after receiving a call about a man acting strangely at an apartment complex on the 300 block of North Whitewater Park Boulevard. Officers made contact with that man and identified him as Parker. Further investigation revealed that there was an active protection order between Parker and a woman living nearby — his wife — and Parker was then arrested and charged with felony stalking. Parker’s next court appearance on this charge is 8:30 a.m. Aug. 16 before Ada County Judge David Manweiler.
  • May 31: During his arraignment on the stalking charge, the judge issued a no-contact order, which bars Parker from getting within 500 feet of his wife.
  • June 14: During a court appearance on the May 30 felony stalking charge, deputies arrested Parker on the April 10 incident and charged him with misdemeanor trespass of privacy. Parker’s next court appearance on this charge is 8:45 a.m. July 29 before Ada County Judge Michael Oths.
  • June 20: Arrest warrant issued for alleged April 26 unlawful entry incident at a Meridian home.
  • July 3: Parker makes voluntary court appearance on the unlawful entry charge, avoiding a warrant arrest, and pleads not guilty to the charge. Court records note that as a condition of being out on bond, Parker could not have “access to firearms.” Parker’s next court appearance on this charge is 10:15 a.m. Aug. 20 before Ada County Judge Thomas Watkins.

On June 29, the Idaho Republican Party elected former Idaho congressman and candidate for governor Raul Labrador as its new chairman. Labrador defeated former Idaho superintendent Tom Luna in a 111-109 vote.

This article was originally published in the Idaho Statesman. It is used here with permission.

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