West
California farming tycoon arrested in wife’s killing
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A California farming tycoon was arrested Tuesday on suspicion of murder in the shooting death of his wife in an Arizona mountain community.
The Navajo County Sheriff’s Office named Michael Abatti, 63, as the suspect in the murder of his wife, 59-year-old Kerri Ann Abatti.
On Nov. 20, at approximately 9:20 p.m., Navajo County Sheriff’s Office deputies arrived in Pinetop, Arizona, at the scene of an apparent homicide and found Kerri Ann Abatti dead from a gunshot wound, according to the sheriff’s office. Less than two weeks later, on Dec. 2, detectives executed search warrants on residences, properties, vehicles and camp trailers in El Centro, California, that were “associated with the Abatti family.”
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Michael Abatti was arrested on suspicion of the murder of his wife, Kerri Abatti. (Jay Calderon/The Desert Sun/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)
On Tuesday, detectives provided testimony to a Navajo County grand jury and obtained an indictment and arrest warrant from the Navajo County Superior Court. Michael was taken into custody that same day and was booked into the Imperial County Jail. The Navajo County Sheriff’s Office said Michael was booked on charges of violating Arizona Revised Statutes 13-1105 and first-degree murder. He is awaiting extradition to Arizona.
The home of Michael Abatti on Dec. 12, 2025, in El Centro, California. (Gregory Bull/AP Photo)
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“We extend our sincere condolences to Kerri’s family and to all those affected by this tragedy,” Navajo County Sheriff David Clouse said in a statement. He thanked those who worked on the case, as well as those who served on the Grand Jury, crediting them for “helping bring justice to the Abatti family.”
Michael and Kerri Abatti lived in El Centro before Kerri left in 2023 for Pinetop-Lakeside, her hometown, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Divorce filings seen by the LA Times reportedly showed that Kerri accused her husband of blocking her attempts to get the full picture of their income and real estate holdings while he made changes to their finances without consulting her or her attorney. She also claimed that she was struggling on the monthly spousal support that the court temporarily awarded her, according to the LA Times.
Agricultural fields in Imperial Valley.
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Michael Abatti comes from a long line of farmers and owns one of the largest agricultural operations in the Imperial Valley, according to reports. Additionally, he reportedly served as a member of the Imperial Irrigation District from 2006 to 2010. He grew several crops, including onions, broccoli and cantaloupes, CBS News reported. The outlet added that Michael and Kerri Abatti were married in 1992 and had three children.
The Imperial County Sheriff’s Office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
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Alaska
Opinion: A defining moment for Alaska’s congressional delegation
Sen. Dan Sullivan and Rep. Nick Begich must choose between complicity and commitment to their fundamental constitutional obligations as legislators. Like so many scandals before, the root cause and means of correction for our current national crisis resides in the deliberative body, not the executive.
It’s been nearly 25 years since energy giant Enron filed for bankruptcy. The company collapsed after it was discovered that CEO Kenneth Lay and other executives had concealed massive debt through fraudulent accounting practices. Billions disappeared from pension plans and retirement accounts of ordinary people across the country.
Executives, like Mr. Lay, capture our attention with their boundless capacity to believe in themselves to the very end, even as the lies, abuse and secrets finally catch up with them.
Despite the coverage they receive, such leaders are really a symptom of a more serious underlying autoimmune disease: a systemic failure of the organization’s policymaking and oversight body.
Time and again, boards that could prevent or contain executive misconduct are caught up in the success of the moment, blinded by groupthink, constrained by the perceived necessities of competitive edge and public image, and passive in response to a forceful leader considered integral to the organization’s success.
The U.S. government provides an unparalleled example of this dual failure of executive leadership and legislative oversight.
President Trump has:
• Been found civilly liable for sexually abusing E. Jean Carroll and is the subject of numerous credible allegations of sexual misconduct.
• Incited an attack on the U.S. Capitol by a mob of his supporters, threatened the vice president and members of Congress in an attempt to interfere with the peaceful transition of power, and later pardoned or commuted the sentences of all those criminally convicted of violence against D.C. and Capitol police during the attack.
• Openly profited off the presidency through the use of cryptocurrency pay-for-play political schemes to the tune of billions of dollars.
• Weaponized departments of the federal government to target his personal enemies.
• Terrorized lawful immigrants and U.S. citizens and stoked domestic conflict through the use of militarized and masked federal police forces in the name of crime reduction and immigration enforcement.
• Threatened our allies with military action in contravention of ratified U.S. treaties and committed acts of war without congressional approval.
• Through his Department of Justice, illegally concealed the names of possible co-conspirators in a case of child sex trafficking associated with the highest echelons in our society, a case in which the president himself is potentially implicated.
Congress is the United States’ board of directors. It is responsible for investigating executive misconduct and, if warranted, impeaching and removing the president and cabinet members.
Members of Congress who refuse to perform their constitutional duties of oversight share responsibility for President Trump’s actions.
That Sen. Sullivan and Rep. Begich belong to the same party as the president is irrelevant. No one considers it a valid excuse if trustees happen to belong to the same political party as the executive leadership they are charged with overseeing. The job remains the same: oversight, accountability, exercise of budgetary authority and policymaking.
Sen. Lisa Murkowski, often alone in her party, has stood up to the Trump administration, modeling the independent-minded leadership we need from all members of the legislative branch.
The United States of America is not a large energy company. Much more is at stake. Innocent people in Alaska and across the nation and world will suffer even more if Republican legislators, including Sen. Sullivan and Rep. Begich, refuse to investigate and fulfill their oath to check the abuse of executive power.
If the Alaska delegation does not act decisively now, they will never be able to wash their hands of these things. The stench of President Trump’s actions will remain with them long after their service to our state has ended.
Joel Potter is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Alaska Anchorage.
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Arizona
ASCS Notes: Central Arizona Raceway Debut
Colorado
Colorado ski season could be several weeks shorter by 2050 as climate warms
Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post
Skiers and snowboarders exploring Copper Mountain’s Resolution Bowl on a recent weekend dodged semi-exposed rocks, the tips of small trees and yellow tufts of exposed grass, sneakily covered by a slick layer of ice.
It felt like an early-season ski day, but it was late January. And this was smack in the middle of one of the biggest snowstorms of the unusually dry, warm winter.
Colorado’s ski season began with a slate of delayed openings, as resorts including Beaver Creek, Powderhorn and Purgatory pushed back the start of the season because of a lack of snow. In early February — two months from peak snowpack — at least a third of the runs at Breckenridge, Crested Butte, Eldora and Loveland remained closed. Winter Park Resort had opened less than a third of its terrain.
“The stuff that is open in the trees at Mary Jane is more likely to mess up your skis than be enjoyable,” Hunter Diveley, a 27-year-old who lives in Englewood, said of the section of Winter Park known for its advanced terrain.
Read more from Elise Schmelzer at DenverPost.com.
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