Idaho
Wanted fugituve taken into custody in Pocatello – East Idaho News
UPDATE
The following is an update from the Idaho Department of Correction:
Kevin Kuintzle was found and arrested without incident by Pocatello Police and Idaho State Police in Pocatello this evening. We would like to thank our law enforcement partners across Idaho who helped in the search and apprehension of Mr. Kuintzle. We are also appreciative of Mendocino County law enforcement agencies for their assistance.
ORIGINAL STORY
ST. ANTHONY — The Idaho Falls Police Department says a 33-year-old man who law enforcement in Fremont County has been searching for has been spotted in Idaho Falls. He is believed to have been involved in an attempted carjacking and theft of a firearm Friday afternoon.
IFPD spokeswoman Jessica Clements said that Kevin Nicholas Kuintzle was last seen at the Walmart on South Utah Avenue.
Kuintzle is considered armed and dangerous and should not be approached, a news release from the police department said.
He was last seen wearing a white long-sleeved shirt, khaki pants and possibly a black coat. He has a shaved head and a red beard, police said. He is 5’11”, 180 pounds and has blue eyes.
The Fremont County Sheriff’s Office and Idaho Department of Correction posted about him on social media earlier on Friday. Law enforcement said Kuintzle walked away from the St. Anthony Work Camp. He was at the camp around 8 p.m. on Thursday.
“We have reason to believe he is driving a silver and green single cab 1995 Dodge pickup with missing paint,” the sheriff’s office posted.
Contact law enforcement immediately or call 911 if you see him.
Kuintzle has a pending first-degree murder case in Jerome County, the Idaho Department of Correction said. His criminal record includes convictions for grand theft in Ada County and operating a vehicle without owner’s consent in Canyon County. The department said he was eligible for parole on April 18, 2022. His sentence was scheduled to be satisfied on Jan. 4, 2030.
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Idaho
Idaho AG warns Idaho renters about growing scam targetting home seekers
Idaho
Bond revoked for indicted Idaho mother
PAYETTE — A Payette mom’s bond was revoked Tuesday after she was charged with suffocating her twin children earlier this month and is believed to pose a danger to the life of her newborn child.
The case, which has drawn national headlines, concerns Andrea Renee Shaw, a 23-year-old Payette mother who in May 2025 said her 18-month-old fraternal twins died the same day, after receiving routine childhood vaccinations. In January, Shaw joined as a plaintiff in a federal lawsuit filed by Children’s Health Defense, an anti-vaccine organization founded by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., with several other plaintiffs claiming vaccine injury or death.
Kennedy, who now serves as secretary of Health and Human Services, is no longer part of the group after taking on the cabinet position, as was reported by the Associated Press.
In Idaho, the twins’ deaths prompted a 14-month investigation by the Payette County Sheriff’s Department. On June 29, the investigation yielded a grand jury indictment of Shaw on two counts of first-degree murder by suffocation. If convicted, Shaw can be punished by up to life in prison or the death penalty, and the court would have the ability to order the penalties be served consecutively, or back to back.
Tuesday’s arraignment at the Payette County Courthouse was primarily attended by Shaw’s relatives and members of the media. Payette County Judge Kiley Stuchlik, who serves Idaho’s Third Judicial District, presided.
A key consideration for Stuchlik on Tuesday was a request from Joseph Filicetti, the legal counsel for Shaw, to have her bond reduced from $2 million to $100,000. Filicetti said this would allow for Shaw to care for a newborn girl, who, according to court documents, was born by caesarean section on June 25, four days prior to Shaw’s grand jury indictment.
State prosecutors objected to the motion for bond reduction, noting at hand was a potential death penalty case and asserting, unlike her husband, Shaw’s story repeatedly changed during questioning. Prosecuting Attorney Mike Duke said releasing Shaw would ultimately put the newborn’s safety at risk.
“That child is the most at risk. We do not think she should be allowed to be anywhere near any children, let alone her own children,” Duke said.
Stuchlik decided to revoke bond entirely, stating Shaw posed a “risk of safety” to the newborn child that was not known to Stuchlik or prosecutors when the $2 million bond was initially set.
Also for consideration Tuesday was a request to have grand jury transcripts of witness testimony provided to prosecutors and defense counsel to prepare their respective cases.
Idaho
Idaho is home to the nation's first DarkSky Reserve. Now it's home to the nations first DarkSky Certified Resort
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