****WARNING**** The details of this story are graphic and may provide disturbing information for readers Investigators continue to search for evidence in cases involving child sexual crimes that span nearly two decades in a small Johnson County, Missouri town.Prosecutors have charged Gregory D. Arnold, 56, with three felony counts of first-degree statutory sodomy.Yvonne P. Arnold, 55, is also charged with one felony count of first-degree statutory sodomy.Both are in the Johnson County, Missouri, jail after their arrest earlier this month. A judge has denied bond in their cases.The details of their criminal cases extremely graphic and disturbing, even to investigators.Prosecutors say Gregory Arnold committed sexual crimes against two children in two of the familys homes in Chilhowee, potentially dating back to 2005. They also alleged in court documents Yvonne Howard sodomized a child in 2012.The Arnolds home along Cedar Avenue in Chilhowee is blocked by a high privacy fence. It is barricaded with trees, brush, and rocks. KMBC 9 Investigates could see chicken wire covering multiple windows at the home.PREVIOUS INVESTIGATIONS QUESTIONED BY NEIGHBORSNeighbors also told KMBC they question on the scope of previous investigations by childrens division and law enforcement, especially after young child came forward to Johnson County sheriffs investigators in May of 2020 about potential crimes committed in the home by Gregory Arnold.Court documents say Johnson County Sheriffs office took a 13-page victim statement on May 27, 2020, after a child came forward to investigators about sexual encounters with Arnold.Johnson County, Mo. sheriffs Lt. Jeff Parsons told KMBC 9 Investigates the department, in general, cannot move forward to prosecutors with cases without enough evidence.In all investigations, you go with what you know, he said. And if you’re not aware of things at the time, you can’t move forward. KMBC asked if the department applied for any search warrants in the case in 2020. Parson said he was limited on what else he could share due to the nature of the current investigation.Obviously, were in a position in the case, now the disclosures that are placed in the probable cause statement, that there was enough to move forward with this case, he said. If we didnt have that back then, that would be the reason why we didnt move forward.Parsons also said with the new information in the probable cause statement, it prompted the department reopen the 2020 investigation. Court documents say Johnson County childrens division workers attempted contact with the Arnolds multiple occasions since 2020, but never got a response or access to the see children at the home.A representative for the division told KMBC 9 Investigates they couldn’t comment about the investigation. The documents also allege children living at the home had no access to the outside world, did not attend school, or see medical professionals. They should have took the kids away from them, said neighbor Bob Gardner. Gardner says he saw children’s division workers at the home, having contact with the Arnolds. But children remained in the home. Next door neighbor Norma Atkinson says the family kept to themselves and stayed barricaded on their property. She said she saw children at the home, but they never spoke to her. Makes you want to cry for the kids, she said. It’s a crying shame. Somebody should have been doing something.Authorities are still looking for tips in the case. KMBC is also going to keep working on the case, too. If you have any tips, email investigates@kmbc.com.
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Awful situation in North Richland Hills where two people are recovering after they were attacked by bees Tuesday afternoon. Police say a man is in critical condition.
MOBILE, Ala. (WKRG) A local woman accused of robbing two men at gunpoint in her home has been arrested, according to the Mobile Police Department. Police identified the woman as 50-year-old Jenit Lee Avery. According to the MPD, Avery was arrested after officers responded to a robbery at her home in the 3900 block []
Lakeview residents continue to sound the alarm about a dangerous pack of coyotes near City Park. A bulletin was sent to Lakeview residents over the weekend after a pack of coyotes ate a family of ducks in the 6800 block of General Diaz. Video showed the coyotes roaming in people’s front yards as well as walking down sidewalks in front of homes. According to Val Cupit with Lakeview Crimewatch, over 20 coyotes were seen at their den on Marconi Drive. Cupit is urging residents in the neighborhood to be vigilant and keep pets and children inside. This is not the first time Cupit has voiced concerns about the coytoes in Lakeview. Just last month, she spoke with WDSU after her pet was killed by a coyote. After that incident, City Park told WDSU they were working with the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries to address the coyote problem. WDSU reached out to City Park about the recent sightings, and received this response: “City Park Conservancy is working with the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, which did a site visit to the Park to survey coyote activity and identify areas in the Park where they may be living.”Consistent with a wildlife mitigation/containment plan supplied by LDWF, CPC is trapping the animals and making areas of the Park less hospitable to coyotes. CPC staff are securing unnatural food sources for these wild animals, including garbage left behind by Park visitors, and practicing deterrent tactics or hazing such as using loud noises to encourage coyotes to leave the area.”CPC is committed to continuing to minimize the presence of coyotes in the Park and asks for the publics help. Park visitors and neighbors are asked to keep pets on a leash, secure their own garbage in bins with tight lids and refrain from leaving food sources like cat food outside.”If a visitor is approached by a coyote, the Humane Society of the United States advises people to be loud and large, yelling and waving arms so the animals know to not approach. Anyone who sees a coyote in their neighborhood should report it to the New Orleans Department of Mosquito, Rodent and Termite Control at 504-658-2400 or mosquitocontrol@nola.gov.”For more information on coyotes, visit the LDWFs website and learn more about Living with Coyotes.”
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When NASA’s Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams launched to the International Space Station in June on the first crewed test flight of Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft, they were supposed to return to Earth roughly a week later, nearly five months before the U.S. presidential election. But after the space agency deemed the capsule too risky to take them home and decided Wilmore and Williams would stay in space until 2025 the two veteran astronauts will now be floating more than 200 miles above their nearest polling place on Election Day in November.As with so many things in the fickle world of spaceflight, NASA already had a contingency plan in place for this exact scenario. Thanks to a special Texas law, the two astronauts will still be able to perform their civic duty, voting absentee from low-Earth orbit.”It’s a very important duty that we have as citizens and I’m looking forward to being able to vote from space, which is pretty cool,” Williams told reporters during a September 13 news conference from the space station.”I sent down my request for a ballot today,” Wilmore said at the news conference. “It’s a very important role that we all play as citizens to be included in those elections, and NASA makes it very easy for us to do that.”American astronauts have been able to cast ballots from space ever since the Texas Legislature passed a bill in 1997, expanding the Texas Election Code to include “a person who meets the eligibility requirements of a voter but who will be on a space flight during the early-voting period and on election day.”That year, NASA astronaut David Wolf became the first American to “vote while you float” during his four-month mission aboard Russia’s Mir Space Station.Since then, multiple astronauts have cast ballots from space, including now-retired NASA astronaut Leroy Chiao in 2004.”When I left to go launch on my mission in October, I suddenly realized I hadn’t put in for an absentee ballot and I hadn’t made any arrangements. So I quickly asked NASA, ‘Hey, can I vote from the station?’ And they said ‘Oh yeah, we have a process in place. No problem,'” Chiao told CNN. “And it turned into a great kind of public service announcement, for me to send down messages encouraging people to go out and vote.”Ballots cast in space get beamed to Earth the same way most data is transmitted between the space station and mission control through NASA’s Near Space Network, a constellation of satellites in space that communicate with antennas on our planet.”It’s actually pretty simple,” Chiao said. “Basically, an encrypted word document will be sent up to their email addresses and they can then open the document with their password.”After Wilmore and Williams fill out their electronic absentee ballots, the forms “will be encrypted and uploaded into the space station’s on-board computer system,” according to NASA. From there, the ballots will flow through a tracking and data relay satellite to a ground antenna at the NASA White Sands Test Facility in Las Cruces, New Mexico. The space agency will then transfer the ballot to mission control in Houston and then to the county clerk responsible for processing the ballots.Like most U.S. astronauts, Wilmore and Williams live near NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Texas’ Harris County, where election officials confirmed to CNN that they are working with the space agency to send the astronauts their ballots on Saturday.”Before sending the astronauts their ballot, a test ballot with a unique password is sent first,” said Rosio Torres-Segura, a spokesperson for the Harris County clerk. “Crew member-specific credentials allow the astronauts access to a secure ballot. After a successful test, the secured ballot is sent as a fillable document so the astronauts can make their selections, save them, and send them back. Once the astronauts vote their live ballot, it is returned, printed, and processed with other ballots.”Wilmore and Williams’ ballots will arrive on Earth about five months before they do. The two astronauts will hitch a ride home on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft in February 2025.