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Report: Woman assaulted in Boise State parking garage

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BOISE — Local authorities are investigating a report of an attack around 9 a.m. Saturday in the Lincoln Garage at Boise State University.

A female was walking in the stairwell when she says the suspect grabbed her from behind and attempted to remove her clothing. She fought him off, at which time he ran away.

The suspect is described as a white male, 20 to 30 years old, 5’6, 180 lbs, with short hair and stubble on his face. He was wearing a grey sweatshirt with no logo and a dark grey hat.

If you have any information about this incident, please contact the Department of Public Safety at (208) 426-6911.

The post Report: Woman assaulted in Boise State parking garage appeared first on East Idaho News.


Officials: This man stole an IDFG trailer containing thousands of dollars of equipment

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The following is a news release & photos from the Idaho Department of Fish & Game.

BOISE — In early April, a thief made off with tens of thousands of dollars of big game live-trapping and monitoring equipment, together with the Fish and Game trailer they were stored in.

Now the public’s help is being sought to bring the case to a close. A reward is being offered for information leading to the arrest of the trailer thief.

The trailer, packed with drive nets, dart guns, and thousands of dollars in radio collars and other gear was stolen on the night of April 8th from the Fish and Game Headquarters parking lot in Boise. The theft was discovered the next day and photos of the suspect and his vehicle were quickly secured.

His identity, however, remains unknown.

Some of the items have been recovered, apparently dumped by the thief at several random locations between Boise, Mountain Home and Jerome. But the trailer, together with most of the other capture gear, remains missing.

“We’re anxious to hear from anyone who can identify our suspect,” Fish and Game regional investigator Kurt Stieglitz noted. “This theft is an affront to the sportsmen and women of this state who paid for this equipment and a major blow to our agency’s ability to properly manage Idaho’s big game populations.”

Persons with information about the trailer theft are asked to call the Fish and Game Nampa office at (208) 465-8465, the CAP hotline at 1-800-632-5999, or the Idaho State Police at (208) 846-7550.

The post Officials: This man stole an IDFG trailer containing thousands of dollars of equipment appeared first on East Idaho News.

I.F. man charged with aggravated assault after argument over water

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IDAHO FALLS — An Idaho Falls man is behind bars after police say he threatened a man with a shotgun Sunday night.

Nicholas Nossaman, 29, was arrested for aggravated assault and booked into the Bonneville County Jail.

Officers responded to the 1000 block of Lake Street for a weapons call around 7:40 p.m.

The 41-year-old victim stated he and Nossaman had an earlier disagreement and Nossaman accused him off turning off his water.

Later, the man said Nossaman confronted him again about the water issue and Nossaman became angry and pointed a shotgun at him.

Other witnesses, who were also outside, reported to police that Nossaman pointed the shotgun at the whole group.

Nossaman is expected to make a court appearance Monday.

The post I.F. man charged with aggravated assault after argument over water appeared first on East Idaho News.

Driggs man accused of stealing police car appears in court

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DRIGGS – The details around an attempted heist of a police vehicle in Driggs were revealed in Teton County Magistrate Court last week.

Sergio Mirava-Pinedo, 25, faces Grand Theft and Driving Under the Influence charges for attempting to drive a police vehicle away from a residence in the early hours of the morning on April 8.

Teton County Sheriff’s Deputy Kendall Bowser testified during Mirava’s preliminary hearing that he was called to respond to a loud argument at a residence on Ross Avenue.

When Deputy Bowser arrived, he said an apparent argument was going on between the driver of a pickup and a person standing outside. Upon seeing the deputy, the driver of the vehicle quickly left the scene.

“I tried to flag the vehicle down using my strobe light,” said Deputy Bowser. “But he drove past.”

Deputy Bowser then looked for the other person, who he saw run into the nearby residence. After rousing the owner and getting their permission to search the premises, Deputy Bowser said he was surprised to hear noise outside.

“I heard a car door shut,” Deputy Bowser recalled. “I went out to see who was there. I saw my patrol vehicle drive past and begin to make a right turn.”

Deputy Bowser said he ran out to stop the patrol car, which slowed to avoid crashing into a parked vehicle.

“I got it to stop by opening the passenger door,” Deputy Bowser said. “When I opened the door, Mr. Mirava raised his hands and lowered his head.”

Deputy Bowser took Mirava into custody, saying it was clear the latter was intoxicated.

Mirava’s defense attorney, Faren Eddins, asked whether it would have been possible to mistake the patrol vehicle with its lights off for another type of car.

Patrol vehicles are clearly marked with a decal on the sides and back, Bowser said.

“Once inside it would be clear it was a police vehicle,” he said.

Although Mirava did not drive a great distance, simply being behind the wheel intoxicated is enough to face a DUI charge.

Grand theft is punishable by a maximum $10,000 fine and a minimum of one year in prison.

Mirava remains in custody with a $25,000 bond. He is also facing an immigration hold. His arraignment in District Court is set for May 2.

This story originally appeared in the Teton Valley News. It is posted here with permission.

The post Driggs man accused of stealing police car appears in court appeared first on East Idaho News.

Ex-BYU-Idaho student pleads guilty to hiding camera in women’s apartment

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Devan MacCabe in a February court appearance. | Stephan Rockefeller, EastIdahoNews.com file photo

REXBURG — A former Brigham Young University-Idaho student pleaded guilty Monday to hiding a camera and recording women in their bathroom.

Devan MacCabe, 23, was booked into the Madison County Jail on Jan. 20 on one felony count of video voyeurism.

MacCabe pleaded guilty before District Judge Gregory Moeller during a pre-trial conference Monday.

According to the BYU-Idaho Scroll, Moeller asked MacCabe if his guilty plea came from actual guilt or a desire to end court proceedings faster.

“I am truly guilty,” MacCabe replied.

Moeller ordered a pre-sentence investigation and allowed MacCabe to be remain released on bond.

MacCabe is due back in court in June for sentencing.

The Salem, Utah, man was arrested after six BYU-Idaho students in a women’s apartment found a camera in their bathroom that investigators believe had been there for a month.

“We went over and discovered a little pinhole camera was hidden in a towel hanger,” Rexburg Police Capt. Randy Lewis told EastIdahoNews.com on Jan. 23.

Police say the camera MacCabe admitted to installing is similar to this one.

MacCabe was a student at BYU-Idaho when he was arrested, but a university spokesman says he is no longer enrolled.

The post Ex-BYU-Idaho student pleads guilty to hiding camera in women’s apartment appeared first on East Idaho News.

Prosecution rests in Martin Ish murder trial

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Martin Edmo Ish | KPVI

POCATELLO — The state rested its case against Martin Edmo Ish Monday after additional testimony from a relative who said Ish told her he had killed Eugene Lorne Red Elk on the night of June 14, 2009.

Ish, 59, is charged with second degree murder in the beating death of Red Elk outside Duffy’s Tavern in Pocatello.

Jennifer Teton, Ish’s cousin, testified that on the morning after Red Elk was attacked, Ish told her that he had “blasted” Red Elk, and she said that Ish told her he believed that he had killed him. She said Ish also complained Red Elk had gotten blood on his shoes.

Red Elk, a member of the Lakota Sioux Nation and a bouncer at the bar, was found fatally beaten in the parking lot of the pub shortly after he had ejected Ish from the bar. He died three days later from injuries sustained in the attack.

Teton told the court Friday she did not come forward until 2015 because she was afraid. She said she contacted police after her daughter, Angel Teton, witnessed Ish’s son, Anthony Ish, shoot and kill 44-year-old Darrell Auck outside the Ish family residence in Fort Hall in October 2014.

Anthony Ish was convicted of second degree murder in federal court in February.

Pocatello police Detective William Brown said Friday Teton was one of two witnesses who came forward with new information that led to Ish’s arrest in 2015.

Charles Tademy testified earlier this week that on the night Red Elk was attacked outside Duffy’s Tavern, Ish showed up at his home on Quinn Road and asked him for a ride to his residence in Fort Hall. Tademy said when he dropped him off, Ish asked him to drive by Duffy’s when he returned to Pocatello and see if anything was going on there. When he drove by the bar, Tademy said he saw police lights and police vehicles in the parking lot and he called and reported the scene to Ish.

Brown told jurors Friday 85 people were interviewed following Red Elk’s death, but leads dried up and the case went cold until 2015 when Teton and Tademy came forward.

The Twin Falls-based jury also heard from a forensic specialist last week who testified during a prerecorded statement that Red Elk died from blunt force trauma to the head.

Forensic Pathologist Charles O. Garrison told the court that he reviewed the case in 2012 at the request of the Pocatello Police Department.

Garrison said he reviewed autopsy reports and examined medical records, photos from the crime scene, and physicians’ reports in the case to rule out the possibility that Red Elk had been struck by a vehicle or died as the result of a fall.

“I saw nothing in those photos to believe that a vehicle was involved,” Garrison said.

Garrison said that apart from a minor injury to his chest wall, Red Elk’s injuries were all from the neck up and included a skull fracture that traveled from just above the victim’s left ear to the back of his skull.

The injury was consistent with being struck in the head with a moving object as opposed to the victim’s head striking a stationary structure, Garrison said.

Garrison said toxicology reports indicated the presence of marijuana, alcohol and methamphetamine in Red Elk’s blood at the time he was killed.

Ish is being represented by Public Defenders Randy Schulthies and Scott Andrew who plan to call a second forensic expert to testify Wednesday.

Last week jurors also watched video of a police interview with Ish that took place in Ada County prior to his arrest in 2015.

Ish told investigators that he was drinking with several friends on the night of June 14, 2009 and that he had been kicked out of the Bourbon Barrel Bar when he was caught stealing cigarettes and after he was removed from a second bar, Ish went to Duffy’s.

During the redacted interview, Ish stated that as soon as he entered the bar he was informed that the bartender at the Bourbon Barrel had alerted Duffy’s staff about the incident at that bar. He said Red Elk approached him and asked him to leave and then escorted him out the door.

Ish told officers that he left the bar and that there was no altercation with Red Elk.

He denied getting a ride home and said he spent the next three or four hours walking to Fort Hall.

The post Prosecution rests in Martin Ish murder trial appeared first on East Idaho News.

Man arrested for alleged sexual abuse of teen and rape of local woman

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Charles Ray Jones Jr. | Bonneville County Sheriff’s Office

IDAHO FALLS — A 30-year-old Idaho Falls man has been charged with two felonies for allegedly raping a 21-year-old woman, who is disabled, and sexually abusing a 13-year-old girl.

The charges — lewd conduct with a child younger than 16 and forcible rape — were filed against Charles Ray Jones Jr. in Bonneville County last week.

Court records show the 21-year-old victim is developmentally disabled and functions at the level of an 8-year-old child. The alleged abuse occurred in October, however, Jones is said to have threatened the 21-year-old victim and her mother, and the pair did not report the crime until April.

The 21-year-old victim talked about the rape with a counselor who then reported it to authorities, according to police reports.

The Idaho Falls Police Department investigated and discovered Jones allegedly forced the woman into a bathroom, pushed her to the ground and raped her. The alleged rape happened in an Idaho Falls hotel where the woman and her mother were staying.

Her mother was not in the room at the time, but learned about it the next day. Together they confronted Jones. The mother told police Jones threatened to make their lives “a living hell” if they reported the incident.

When investigators spoke with Jones about the rape allegations, he denied forcibly raping the woman. Investigators said Jones provided seven versions of what happened. At one point, Jones told investigators the developmentally disabled adult was flirting with him and that she was sexually aggressive toward him and the victim “thought he was cute.”

Court documents show Jones later admitted to investigators that he did have forcible sex with the 21-year-old in the bathroom, and that he knew she was disabled. Jones maintained he did not threaten the woman or her mother.

On the lewd conduct charge, Jones is said to have had sex with 13-year-old girl. Jones admitted to investigators he had sexual intercourse with a teen. He also told police the victim had wanted the sexual interaction, according to court documents.

Jones was arraigned Monday on both charges and remains in the Bonneville County Jail on a $50,000 bond. If convicted of either crime, Jones faces up to life in prison.

The post Man arrested for alleged sexual abuse of teen and rape of local woman appeared first on East Idaho News.

Court documents detail horrific abuse that allegedly led to toddler’s death

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Zachary Tendoy | Courtesy photo

EDITOR’S NOTE: This story contains violent descriptions of alleged child abuse. Reader discretion is advised.

BLACKFOOT — Court documents unsealed Tuesday detail the horrific events investigators say happened when an 18-month-old was “viciously attacked” – receiving injuries that led to his untimely death, according to court documents.

Jesus Adan Castillo, 22, is charged with first-degree murder in connection to the death of Zachary Tendoy, the son of Castillo’s girlfriend.

On March 23, around 4 a.m., the Bingham County Sheriff’s Office received a 911 call that a child was not breathing at a home on the 1600 block of Camas Street. The caller told dispatchers the boy had fallen out of a crib.

RELATED | BLACKFOOT MAN CHARGED WITH MURDER AFTER YOUNG CHILD DIES

Officers and paramedics went to the home and court documents state Zachary was laying limp on the floor with vomit on his chest. His pupils were fully dilated and his skin tone was described as blueish-gray.

Jesus Adam Castillo | Bingham County Sheriff’s Office

Castillo and the child’s mother were inside the home.

Documents state Castillo told police that he was in the shower and the child’s mother was sleeping when he heard a loud thud. Castillo said he left the shower to check on Zachary and the toddler “acted dazed” but seemed fine. The boy’s condition quickly worsened so Castillo told officers he woke up the boy’s mother and called 911.

Zachary was rushed to Bingham Memorial Hospital and a cat-scan revealed multiple skull fractures on both sides of his head along with brain swelling, according to documents.

Doctors later discovered severe traumatic injuries including tears in Zachary’s major blood vessels, valves and retinal hemorrhaging in Zachary’s eyes.

“Doctor’s explained…to sustain these injuries in a child of similar size (they would have to have been) in an auto accident at 70 mph … and the tear in the stomach is equivalent to being secured in only a lap belt of the time of the accident,” court documents state. “The Doctors described the attack as being very violent.”

After investigators learned this information, they called Castillo in for an interview.

Court records say Castillo laid out the following series of events that he said took place:

* Castillo and Zachary’s mother were eating dinner and consuming alcohol.

* They put Zachary down for bed around 9:30 p.m.

* Castillo and Zachary’s mother continued to drink alcohol while watching movies and talking.

* Zachary’s mother went to bed. Castillo stayed up and continued to drink alcohol.

* Castillo went to shower when Zachary woke up and crawled out of his playpen. Castillo said he heard a thud and went to check on Zachary, who was upset. Castillo gave Zachary a bottle.

* Zachary was whining. Castillo said that’s when he pushed Zachary as hard as he could. The boy fell down into a door jamb.

* Zachary got up and continued to follow Castillo – “bothering him.” Castillo said as he walked away, the boy was behind him. Castillo said he “heel kicked” Zachary as hard as he could in the stomach. Zachary fell back, hitting a wall and door trim.

* Castillo then grabbed Zachary and tossed him back into the playpen.

* Zachary continued to cry and Castillo picked him up. He hit him as hard as he could and shook Zachary “a couple times.” He then shook Zachary “three to four times,” and then shook him “five or six times.”

* Castillo told investigators he put Zachary back in the playpen. Zachary crawled out and fell on the floor. Castillo went back into the room and found Zachary unresponsive on his back.

Zachary suffered from skull fractures and multiple other injuries, according to court documents. He was declared brain dead at 2:47 p.m. on March 25. Following his death, Zachary’s family donated his organs to eight children in need.

RELATED | FAMILY WILL DONATE ORGANS OF SLAIN TODDLER TO 8 OTHER CHILDREN

Castillo was arrested on felony charges of aggravated battery and felony injury to child. Following the toddler’s death, prosecutors amended the charges to first-degree murder.

Castillo remains in the Bingham County Jail on a $1 million bond. Bingham County Prosecutor Cleve Colson is not pursuing the death penalty but if convicted, Castillo could face up to life in prison with a $50,000 fine.

Castillo is scheduled to arraigned in Bingham County on May 1.

The post Court documents detail horrific abuse that allegedly led to toddler’s death appeared first on East Idaho News.


Man admits to robbing Idaho bank with hatchet

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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 — Charles Ray Bartkowiak, 34, of Hayden, Idaho, pleaded guilty on April 25, to bank robbery, Acting U.S. Attorney Rafael M. Gonzalez, Jr. announced. Bartkowiak was indicted by a federal grand Jury in Coeur d’Alene on Dec. 13, 2016.

According to the plea agreement, Bartkowkiak admitted that on November 28, 2016, he entered the Bank CdA in Hayden, Idaho and placed a hatchet on the counter of the teller window. He demanded all the teller’s cash and left with $6,366 in U.S. currency. Bartkowiak was identified from video surveillance and law enforcement found some of the money and the hatchet in his car. He admitted to the crime and was arrested.

The charge of Bank Robbery is punishable by up to 20 years in prison, a maximum fine of $250,000.00, and up to 3 years of supervised release.

Sentencing is set for July 26, 2017, before U.S. District Judge Edward J. Lodge at the federal courthouse in Coeur d’Alene.

The case was investigated by North Idaho Violent Crimes Task Force (NIVCTF). The NIVCTF is comprised of federal, state and local agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Idaho State Police, Post Falls Police Department, Coeur d’Alene Police Department, Kootenai County Sheriff’s Office and the Idaho Department of Corrections.

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UPDATE: Pocatello Police no longer seeking woman accused of fraud

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UPDATE:

Pocatello Police have cancelled the person of interest alert in this case. The city of Pocatello issued the following statement:

“Earlier today, the Pocatello Police Department was notified of a possible fraudulent use of a transaction card that took place April 7.

During the course of the investigation, officers were provided a surveillance photo by the bank of a person of interest. Officers then sought the public’s assistance in identifying the person in the photo. The subject in the photo was quickly identified and later, officers determined the bank had misidentified the person of interest. Officers would like to thank the public for their help in identifying the subject and reiterate that she is no longer a person of interest nor is she involved in any crime the Pocatello Police Department is investigating.”

ORIGINAL STORY:

POCATELLO — The Pocatello Police Department is asking for help in identifying a woman accused of fraudulently using a bank card.

Police say the woman, who was driving a black or dark gray Honda Rigdeline with an Idaho license plate, conducted the transaction on April 7 at the Mountain America Credit Union on the 1000 block of Yellowstone Highway.

Officers did not release how much money the woman obtained or who was the original owner of the bank card.

Anyone with information on the crime is asked to contact Pocatello Police Detective Sampson at (208) 234-6121.

The post UPDATE: Pocatello Police no longer seeking woman accused of fraud appeared first on East Idaho News.

Utah parents warn of terrifying ‘virtual kidnapping’ scam

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OGDEN, Utah — An Ogden mother and father have a serious warning for parents everywhere: beware of a scam called, “virtual kidnapping.”

Last Wednesday, father Jeff Weber was at work driving his work vehicle, a hazmat truck when his cell phone rang from an unknown number. He did not answer. But then it rang again, the same unknown number. He answered it.

“I heard a young girl crying saying ‘daddy, daddy I’m scared,’ then the kid voice went away and a man came on and told me he kidnapped my daughter and if I ever wanted to see her again I would not tell anybody or hang up,” explained Weber. “The guy sounded serious.”

Weber asked him questions about his daughter like what is she wearing, and let me talk with her again. The man on the other end of the line refused to have the girl speak with him on the phone again.

“It scared me to death. The guy says, ‘you know I’ll kill her. You’ll never see her again. You’ll be paying for a funeral.’”

Weber did what he could to try to discretely get ahold of his wife, LeeAnn Weber to confirm their 13-year-old daughter was safe at school. Weber happened to be at work so he quietly told his co-workers to call.

“It was pretty tense. I was trying to use a phone. I couldn’t even text my wife. The secretary let me borrow her phone and I couldn’t even text message. Like, I was shaking so bad I couldn’t push the buttons. It was so bad.”

Weber managed to work with his co-workers and confirm with his wife that she made it to their daughter’s school, along with their daughter’s maternal mother too, and were all three there physically with their daughter. That meant Weber could hang up with the alleged kidnapper- finally confirming it was a scam.

“It’s just evil. You call somebody and tell them you have the most important thing in the world to them,” said Weber.

“It’s the most terrifying thing that a parent can go through to think that someone has your child and you don’t know where they are,” said LeeAnn Weber. “You feel helpless.”

They called the police and filed a report. Salt Lake City police said the problem is finding these virtual kidnappers is almost impossible.

Then a few days later, on Saturday, Weber got the same call unknown caller on his cell phone. LeeAnn was with him at home and she recorded the call.

“It was nearly the exact same man with the same scam,” said Weber.

Listen to the scam phone call below:

Weber knew not to fall for this and told the man exactly how he felt about his fake kidnapping calls.

Weber said the man told him, “Fine, I will just find somebody else to rob!”

That is when Weber realized the scammer could prey on another family and they might fall for it and pay the scammer the money they demand. Weber has this message for parents:

“Keep the caller on the phone as long as possible. Say whatever you have to, to not hang up, and find a way to also call police and call your son or daughter to make sure they are safe and where they are supposed to be.

“It is a red flag when the scammer tells you not to call police, call police,” said SLCPD Public Information Officer, Greg Wilkins, “The problem is these scammers know it is hard to locate them and hard to criminalize them when they fail to scam someone.”

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

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Idaho man sentenced for federal hate crime based on victim’s sexual orientation

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

BOISE – Kelly Schneider, 23, of Nampa, Idaho, was sentenced today in U.S. District Court to 28 years in prison, five years of supervised release and a $5,000 fine based on his guilty plea to violently assaulting Steven Nelson because he was a gay man, resulting in Mr. Nelson’s death, announced Acting Assistant Attorney General Tom Wheeler, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, and Acting U.S. Attorney Rafael M. Gonzalez, Jr., for the District of Idaho.

Schneider was indicted by a federal grand jury on January 10, 2017, with one count of violating the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr., Hate Crimes Prevention Act. He pleaded guilty to the charge on February 7, 2017. He was sentenced today by Chief U.S. District Court Judge B. Lynn Winmill.

RELATED | MAN ADMITS TO VIOLENTLY ASSAULTING MAN, RESULTING IN DEATH, BECAUSE HE WAS GAY

“Kelly Schneider assaulted and killed a man because of the man’s sexual orientation,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Wheeler. “This is a federal crime, and the Department of Justice will continue to work with our federal and state law enforcement partners to enforce our federal hate crimes laws.”

“Steven Nelson was assaulted and later died because he was gay,” said Gonzalez. “This is precisely the kind of bias motivated violence that the Shepard-Byrd Hate Crimes Prevention Act was passed to address. I commend the federal and local prosecutors and investigators who brought the defendant to justice.”

According to the plea agreement, on the evening of April 27, 2016, Schneider posted a solicitation for sex on backpage.com, an Internet website, which included a shirtless photo of himself. Mr. Nelson responded to that posting, and Schneider met with him the next evening. Schneider took Mr. Nelson’s money without engaging in any sexual act with Mr. Nelson. Before the encounter, Schneider told his friends that he was not gay and would not let anyone who was gay touch him.

In the early morning hours of April 29, Schneider resumed communication with Mr. Nelson. Schneider then conspired with other individuals to again rob Mr. Nelson. According to the plan, Schneider was to meet up with Mr. Nelson in a parking lot and ask Mr. Nelson to drive to Gott’s Point, an isolated wildlife area in the Deer Flat Wildlife Refuge near Lake Lowell, for a sexual encounter. At Gott’s Point, Schneider would rob Mr. Nelson, and two of Schneider’s cohorts would be lying in wait as “back up” to assist Schneider if Mr. Nelson resisted the robbery.

When Schneider and Mr. Nelson reached Gott’s Point, Schneider immediately began physically assaulting Mr. Nelson, kicking him 20-30 times with steel-toed boots and repeatedly using a homophobic slur. Mr. Nelson never resisted throughout the attack. He died of his injuries later that day. No one else participated in the assault.

Schneider was sentenced earlier this month in state court for first degree murder based on Mr. Nelson’s death. The state court sentenced him to a fixed 28-year term of imprisonment and life indeterminate. Schneider’s federal sentence will be served concurrently to the state sentence.

The Canyon County Sheriff’s Office, with assistance from the Treasure Valley Metro Violent Crime Task Force, conducted the murder investigation. The FBI conducted the federal hate crime investigation.

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Trial postponed yet again for woman accused of beating 3-year-old boy

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Lorena Ocampo-Garcia appears in court in March 2016.

IDAHO FALLS — The trial for a 25-year-old woman accused of severely beating a child and causing brain injuries, has now been continued six times — dragging the case out more than a year.

Lorena Ocampo-Garcia, of Idaho Falls, was charged with felony aggravated battery and felony use of a deadly weapon in alleged beating of a 3-year-old child in February 2016.

Ocampo-Garcia is accused of using a 14-inch long hard plastic toy to strike the child, who she was babysitting on Feb. 23, 2016. EMT’s were called to her home where they said the boy was unresponsive, vomiting and bleeding from his nose and mouth.

Ocampo-Garcia pleaded not guilty during an arraignment in March 2016. A jury trial was scheduled for July 19, that was then continued to November 29, which was again continued to December 5, which was again continued to February 27, 2017, which was again continued to May 15, which was again continued to July 24.

Randolph B. Neal, then Ocampo-Garcia’s attorney, asked Judge Dane Watkins to delay the trial for the first time back in March 2016 so he could obtain medical records pertaining to the alleged victim. He also raised questions about police investigators assigned to the case and stated interrogation techniques used to get confessions can not always be trusted.

Neal was privately hired by Ocampo-Garcia, but on Thursday, Neal told EastIdahoNews.com he no longer represent Ocampo-Garcia. In November, Trent Grant was appointed public defender for Ocampo-Garcia.
However, Grant has since left the public defenders office, so on April 20, Ocampo-Garcia was appointed a new public defender — Rocky Wixom.

According to court records, after EMTs arrived, the child was rushed to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center where doctors said he had an internal brain injury, forcing them to medically induced the child into a coma to “limit his movement and stimulation” in an effort to reduce brain swelling, according to court records. He was later admitted for surgery and placed in the intensive care unit.

Court records show the child was incapable of moving the right side of his body as a result of his injuries.

Ocampo-Garcia originally told investigators the child threw himself into a pile of 2×4 boards, but later admit to detectives that she grabbed the child by his hair and pushed him to the ground. At one point, documents show Ocampo-Garcia picked up a toy and hit him “no more than eight times” in the head.

Court records show photographs taken of the child’s hands, according to investigators they were bruised as a result of him trying to protect his head. Ocampo-Garcia confirmed with police that the boy held his hands to his head while she hit him with the toy.

Investigators took possession of the toy, which was more than 14 inches in length, made of hard plastic and weighed 1.25 lbs.

Ocampo-Garcia was arrested in Madison County on Thursday, Feb. 25 and booked into the Bonneville County Jail. She posted $30,000 bond in February and, as a condition of her bond, is not allowed to have any unsupervised contact with children.

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Martin Ish found guilty of manslaughter

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Martin Edmo Ish | KPVI

POCATELLO – After deliberating for more than 12 hours, a jury, selected from Twin Falls, found Martin Edmo Ish guilty of felony voluntary manslaughter Friday.

Ish, 59, was originally charged with second degree murder in the beating death of Eugene Lorne Red Elk almost eight years ago.

The jury also found Ish guilty of being a persistent violator, an enhancement that could add to up to 15 years in prison onto his sentence. Ish has prior felony convictions for possession of more than three ounces of marijuana in 2003 and in 2011 for felony possession of methamphetamine.

During jury instruction Thursday, Sixth District Judge David C. Nye told the jury that they could consider a charge of voluntary manslaughter, which did not require proof of malice, only evidence Ish had struck Red Elk with a blunt object and that action resulted in his death.

Bannock County Prosecutor Steve Herzog told the eight women and four men of the jury that Ish was motivated by pride when he attacked Red Elk outside Duffy’s Tavern in 2009.

During closing remarks in the 10-day-long trial, Herzog said Ish had already been ejected from two Old Town bars by the time he got to Duffy’s on the night of June 14, 2009 and when Red Elk escorted him out of that establishment as well, Ish was angry and his pride was hurt.

Herzog reminded jurors that a bar patron testified during the first days of the trial that he saw a man matching Ish’s description pacing back and forth in the in the parking lot a few minutes after Ish was removed from Duffy’s.

“I would submit that Ish had his pride hurt several times on June 14, 2009,” Herzog said.

Ish’s told police during a 2015 interview that left with no ride and no money, he walked to Fort Hall after being kicked out of Duffy’s.

But Herzog noted testimony from Charles Tademy who said that the defendant showed up at his home that night and that he drove Ish to his residence in Fort Hall. Tademy said that Ish also asked him to drive by Duffy’s when he returned to see if anything was going on there – Tademy said he saw police vehicles and lights and that he reported the activity to Ish.

Tademy came to the attention of investigators after Ish’s cousin, Jennifer Teton, came forward in 2015. Teton told police that on the morning following the attack, Ish told her that he “blasted” Red Elk and that he was “gurgling blood.” She said Ish believed that he had killed him.

“Just because the case was not solved in 48 hours does not diminish the evidence in the case,” Herzog said.

Public Defenders Randy Schulthies and Scott Andrew rested their case with testimony from Cliff Nelson, a forensic pathologist and an Oregon medical examiner, who rebutted the statement of Charles O. Garrison, a forensic pathologist who testified earlier this week that Red Elk was struck with a moving object.

While both experts agreed that Red Elk died from blunt force trauma to the head, Nelson told the jury that Red Elk’s head injuries occurred when he struck the back of his head on a hard surface, like asphalt.

Nelson said he would have ruled the manner of death in Red Elk’s case as undetermined rather than homicide. He said the injuries could have happened as the result of a vehicle versus pedestrian collision, a fall or being pushed off balance and falling onto the back of his head.

During cross examination, Nelson told Deputy Prosecutor Ryan Godfrey that he did not review witness statements or police reports in the case, but relied on autopsy photos, medical reports and physician’s notes in making his determination.

In his closing statements, Schulthies asked the jury to consider that law enforcement and the state suffered from tunnel vision in the case and that their investigation had focused solely on Ish while disregarding other factors.

Schulthies pointed to conflicting statements made by state witnesses.

“The state has picked out the facts that they wanted and disregarded everything else,” Schulthies said.

He recalled testimony from eyewitness Heather Davis, who identified the man she saw in the parking lot arguing with Red Elk minutes before he went down as a tall, skinny African American male in his early 30s.

Davis also told police that she had seen the man earlier at the Faun Apts. located across the street from Duffy’s.

That man was identified as Ron Bailey Jr. and he was not questioned about his whereabouts on June 14, 2009, Schulthies said.

“The state wants you to believe that (Davis) was right on one point and everything else is wrong,” Schulthies said.

Schulthies stated during closing remarks that the woman who found Red Elk in the parking lot initially reported that he had been struck by a car and Schulthies added that three medical experts failed to exclude a vehicle collision as the cause of Red Elk’s injuries.

“If you accept the state’s version you have to cherry pick information,” Schulthies said. “Your job is not to pick out information, but to look at the entire case.”

In rebuttal, Deputy Prosecutor Ashley Graham told jurors that the description provided by Davis did not match Bailey and there was no other evidence that connected him to the death.

Graham said evidence showing that Ish lied to police about how he got back to Fort Hall that night was an important fact in the case.

“It matters that Tademy took Ish home, much information was gained from Tademy,” Graham said. “(Ish) wanted to keep Tademy out of the loop.”

The post Martin Ish found guilty of manslaughter appeared first on East Idaho News.

Driggs man gets jail time for fleeing cops

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Teton Valley News file photo

DRIGGS — A Teton Valley resident was sentenced to 10 days in jail and 24 months probation this week for running from and kicking at a Sheriff’s deputy last January.

Austin Darrow, 28, pleaded guilty to a charge of resisting and obstructing an officer in Teton County Magistrate’s court on Wednesday.

“The cop asked me to walk over to his vehicle and I ran,” Darrow said.

According to his affidavit of the event, Patrol Deputy Andrew Sewell observed a vehicle run a stop sign at 2:00 am. When Deputy Sewell activated his lights, a man stepped out. Sewell told the man to stay where he was, but “the man fled on foot.”

Sewell pursued Darrow into a back yard, telling him multiple times to stop. Darrow responded with an obscenity and even kicked at Deputy Sewell once he got a hold of the man’s foot.

Darrow was arrested at his residence several hours later and spent a day in custody.

“I want to apologize for the court for my mistakes and if an officer pulls me over and tells me to stop to make sure to stop and figure out what’s going on,” Darrow said.

Darrow and his defense attorney Chad Marlowe had arranged a plea agreement for 90 days suspended jail time and six months unsupervised probation.

However, after hearing about Darrow’s prior record, which include a DUI and multiple counts of possessing a controlled substance, Judge Jason Walker decided not to follow the plea agreement to include one year suspended jail sentence and a longer, supervised probation.

“Resisting and obstructing has a higher penalty than most misdemeanors because it is more serious,” Judge Walker said. “The conduct here is just not okay. The fact is he ran, was verbal with an officer and then fought with an officer. There were officers who could have been hurt or the situation could have escalated.”

Judge Walker ordered Darrow into immediate custody although Darrow’s attorney asked that he have a chance to get his work shifts covered.

“The bottom line is no, he is going to go to jail today. He’ll have to work that stuff out,” Walker said.

This article was originally published in the Teton Valley News. It is used here with permission.

The post Driggs man gets jail time for fleeing cops appeared first on East Idaho News.


Man arrested for allegedly stealing car and bank cards

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The following is a news release from the Idaho Falls Police Department.

IDAHO FALLS — Authorities arrested 29-year-old Anthony M. Santiago for possession of a stolen car Saturday night.

The Bonneville County man was also arrested for fraudulent possession of financial transaction cards, theft by receiving stolen property, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Police reports show officers were notified that Santiago was allegedly driving a stolen 2011 Nissan Altima in the area of Woodruff and John Adams around 7:25 p.m. Officers made contact with Santiago at Hoopes and 17th Street and confirmed the vehicle was stolen on April 24.

Santiago was also allegedly in possession of other stolen property, including the vehicle owner’s financial transaction cards. He also appeared to have marijuana and drug paraphernalia in his possession.

The post Man arrested for allegedly stealing car and bank cards appeared first on East Idaho News.

IFPD to release DNA Phenotype Snapshot in Angie Dodge homicide case

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The following is a news release from the Idaho Falls Police Department.

IDAHO FALLS — The Idaho Falls Police Department will officially release the DNA Phenotype Snapshot in the Angie Dodge homicide case during a press conference on Wednesday, May 3.

The press conference will be held in the Idaho Falls City Council Chambers. It will begin promptly at 9:30 a.m.

GALLERY | PHOTOS FROM CHRIS TAPP RESENTENCING HEARING

VIDEO | COMPLETE LIBRARY OF FOOTAGE, INCLUDING THE ENTIRE HEARING

RELATED | CHRIS TAPP’S FIRST EXTENSIVE INTERVIEW FOLLOWING RELEASE FROM PRISON

Members of the IFPD Criminal Investigation Team and Dr. Steven Armentrout from Parabon Nanolabs will be available for questions during the press conference regarding the current investigation status and the DNA Phenotype Snapshot.

Channel Blend CEO & President Jeff Neiswanger and Channel Blend Project Manager Derek Christiansen will also be available for questions regarding the call center.

EASTIDAHONEWS.COM WILL STREAM THE PRESS CONFERENCE LIVE ON OUR WEBSITE AND FACEBOOK PAGE.

The post IFPD to release DNA Phenotype Snapshot in Angie Dodge homicide case appeared first on East Idaho News.

Idaho man says he was robbed, choked and left for dead along highway

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JUNTURA, Ore. — A Nampa man says he was robbed at gunpoint, choked to the point of unconsciousness and left for dead on the side of an Oregon highway after a Craigslist deal to sell a trailer turned out to be a trap.

Mike Miller, the alleged victim, said he agreed to meet the prospective buyers halfway between Christmas Valley and Nampa. They arranged to meet at a grocery store parking lot in Vale, Oregon, to make the transaction, KTVB reports.

The suspects attacked moments after Miller unhooked the trailer from his truck and attached it to the other vehicle.

The suspects forced Miller at gunpoint to sign a bill of sale, according to Malheur County Sheriff Brian Wolfe.

One of the suspects wrapped Miller in a choke hold.

Miller was found on the roadside by an Oregon Department of Transportation employee, who called police.

Authorities later arrested three suspects whose vehicle broke down a short distance from the location where the alleged attack on Miller occurred.

Oregon State Police arrested Tracy Werner and Stephanie Poulignot of Christmas Valley, Oregon, on suspicion of robbery and assault charges. A 17-year-old boy, who Wolfe said participated in the assault and theft, is also in custody.

Poulignot and Werner were booked into the Malheur County Jail, while the teenage suspect is in the custody of juvenile corrections.

This story first appeared in the Idaho Press-Tribune. It is used here with permission.

The post Idaho man says he was robbed, choked and left for dead along highway appeared first on East Idaho News.

As tax returns come back, scam season heats up

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Stock photo

BOISE – Tax Day has come and gone, which means people are receiving their tax refunds.

It also means it’s high season for scams.

An IRS scam has been sweeping the nation recently, with fraudsters calling victims and demanding that they owe the tax agency money.

Cheryl Tussey, who has worked with AARP Idaho on fraud prevention and education for two decades, says seniors are especially vulnerable to these scams. She shares her No. 1 rule when it comes to tax scams.

“The IRS will never call you,” she emphasizes. “It’s so important that people understand that. They do not call. They will contact you by mail first if there’s a problem. They do not call you. And if folks can remember that, they can just hang up.”

Tussey says scams are especially prevalent from January through the end of May. She stresses that people should never give out personal information over the phone and should shred any documents with sensitive information on them rather than simply throwing them away.

Tussey has heard many heart-wrenching stories of seniors, often on fixed incomes, who have been defrauded out of thousands of dollars.

Identity theft is common throughout the year. So are other scams, such as the so-called “grandparent scam,” where a thief calls and pretends a person’s grandchild is in jail and in need of bail money.

Tussey says these scams persist in new iterations and may never go away.

“I don’t believe we’ll ever be able to stop the initiation of old and new scams and frauds, but we can decrease the number of victims via these education opportunities,” she states.

AARP Idaho holds events free to the public called Scam Jams across the state where speakers, such as Tussey and state officials, offer tips on how to avoid scams and frauds.

The next Scam Jam is at the College of Idaho in Caldwell on May 25.

The post As tax returns come back, scam season heats up appeared first on East Idaho News.

Man detained after fleeing scene of crash and smashing into tree

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Stephan Rockefeller, EastIdahoNews.com

IDAHO FALLS — A man was detained Monday after allegedly fleeing the scene of a two-vehicle crash at the intersection of Woodruff Avenue and 17th Street.

The crash occurred around 10:30 a.m. The man, who has not been identified, was driving a dark-colored car that struck a silver SUV in the intersection.

The impact caused the SUV to turn on its side, trapping a female driver. The Idaho Falls Fire Department had to extricate the woman from the vehicle.

Idaho Falls Police spokesman Joelyn Hansen confirmed the man fled the scene and then crashed into a tree on John Adams Parkway.

Witnesses say several passersby followed the man in their vehicles when he fled the first crash.

The woman was transported by ground ambulance to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center with unknown injuries.

The man was detained by police. It is unclear if he was injured in either crash.

Stephan Rockefeller, EastIdahoNews.com

The post Man detained after fleeing scene of crash and smashing into tree appeared first on East Idaho News.

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