Utah
Southern Utah shop owners plead guilty to stealing $500K in Ukraine donations
ST. GEORGE — A couple accused of stealing more than $500,000 in donations meant for Ukraine through their ammunition shop have pleaded guilty to federal wire fraud conspiracy.
John Earl Donaldson, 32, and Carlie Elizabeth Winters, 30, were charged in federal court in April 2024 with wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy. The couple was accused of defrauding customers and financial institutions of more than $600,000 in total, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office of Utah.
Donaldson was a federal law enforcement officer before working as a consultant for a private security company, according to his LinkedIn profile.
The couple ran a company called Urban Armz in St. George, which state records show was started in late 2020 with Donaldson as its registered agent. Their website falsely claimed that the “company clients” included the FBI and the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, according to court documents, and claimed they could “sell large quantities of ammunition to potential customers for competitively low prices.”
When a customer wired $90,000 to the company for 300,000 rounds of ammunition in December 2021, investigators say the company never delivered.
In April 2022, charging documents say a Detroit-based company paid Urban Armz $300,000 for body armor, while another nonprofit sent over $217,000 for “night vision goggles, thermal optics and other equipment” — both orders intended for Ukrainian first responders in war zones.
Neither order made it to Ukraine, according to the indictment, with Donaldson and Winters spending over $600,000 from the three orders on “unrelated parties, other withdrawals, shopping and transfers to personal accounts.”
The two told each company that orders were delayed, sometimes blaming the shipping company or customs, before going silent, according to court documents.
“I falsely represented to a nonprofit organization that Urban Armz could fulfill an order of body armor and other equipment that the nonprofit intended to donate to Ukrainian first responders. After the nonprofit paid for the order, I falsely represented that the delivery was delayed and would imminently arrive,” Donaldson said in his guilty plea statement.
On May 19, Donaldson pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Sept. 25.
Winters pleaded guilty Monday to wire fraud conspiracy. She will be sentenced on Oct. 10.
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
Utah
Multiple earthquakes detected near Kanosh
KANOSH, Utah — The United States Geological Survey recorded multiple earthquakes near Kanosh Sunday morning, each of them having an average magnitude of 3.0.
The first earthquake, magnitude 3.0, was detected just after 12:30 a.m., with the epicenter located half a mile south of Kanarraville.
The second quake, magnitude 3.2, was detected around 5:45 a.m., with the epicenter nearly five miles south-southwest of Kanosh. This was followed by two more quakes in the same area, a magnitude 2.5 quake coming in around 6:35 a.m., followed by a third around 7:45 a.m, which measured at magnitude 3.3.
This has since been followed by another quake, measuring at magnitude 3.7, being detected around 8:45 a.m. The geographic location in the USGS report places the epicenter approximately over two miles south of the Dry Wash Trail, about six miles south-southwest of Kanosh.
FOX 13 News previously spoke with researchers at University of Utah, who said that earthquake swarms are relatively common. A study published in 2023 posits that swarms may be triggered by geothermal activity. The findings came after a series of seismic swarms were detected in central Utah, within the vicinity of three geothermal power plants.
The study also says that the swarms fall into a different category than aftershocks that typically follow large quakes, such as the magnitude 5.7 earthquake that hit the Wasatch Fault back in 2020.
Utah
Embattled Utah Rep. Trevor Lee loses county GOP convention — but wins enough support to make primary
Earlier in the week, House Speaker Mike Schultz said lawmakers asked the attorney general to investigate allegations of fraud and bribery against Lee.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Rep. Trevor Lee, R-Layton, running for reelection, addresses delegates during the Davis County Republican Party nominating convention at Syracuse High School on Saturday, April 18, 2026.
Utah
A new bar brings the Himalayas to the foot of Big Cottonwood Canyon
Also from Utah Eats: A Utah baker ends his run on a Food Network competition; Lucky Slice’s territory grows.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) The Yeti, a Himalayan-themed bar in Cottonwood Heights, is pictured on Wednesday, April 8, 2026.
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