The Utah Jazz’s draft plans are becoming clearer by the day.
Source: Utah News

News on Everything Utah!
Source: Utah News
Source: Utah News
Source: Utah News
SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — Several Utah agencies are speaking out to clarify their lack of involvement in the situation involving American Fork Police Department and their arrest of a YouTube creator, after they have been receiving hundreds of calls about it.
American Fork Police Department (AFPD) is under fire after a YouTuber named Ben Schneider (who goes by the screen name Reckless Ben) posted a video accusing AFPD of misconduct and corruption. Schneider was arrested by AFPD for stalking in March over his involvement in an Oregon case involving purportedly stolen Lego collection.
The video garnered massive public attention and outcry against AFPD, prompting them to release information and footage related to the case in the name of transparency.
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Now, Central Utah 911 and Salem Police Department have posted to social media to clarify that they are not involved in this matter, stating that they have received significant attention and high volumes of calls.
According to Central Utah 911, just on Saturday between 6 a.m. and 10 a.m., dispatch’s call volume jumped from 157 calls (their norm) to 424 calls. Reportedly, just during the busiest hour, they received 143 calls, and 138 of those were non-emergency calls. That’s a 170% increase when compared to a typical Saturday morning.
Central Utah 911 said that the same dispatchers answer non-emergency calls as 911 calls, and they were facing three times their normal workload. It would appear that the majority of calls were about the American Fork situation. They stated that they are not involved in the investigation and they cannot provide updates on the situation.
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“Imagine needing to report a house fire, a serious crash, a heart attack, or a crime in progress and being placed on hold because every available line is tied up by calls seeking information that dispatch cannot provide,” they wrote. “We understand people are passionate about this situation. We simply ask that those conversations be directed to the agency involved so our dispatchers can remain available for the emergencies that truly cannot wait.”
Additionally, Central Utah 911 reported that their dispatchers were yelled at, cursed at, threatened, and harassed over the issue. “We would also ask people to remember there are real people answering these phones.”
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Salem Police Department’s jurisdiction neighbors AFPD’s, and it appears that many people have confused Salem, Utah with Salem, Oregon–where the case of the allegedly stolen Lego collection originated. In the post, the police department clarified that difference.
“Because our department has received numerous inquiries, we want to officially clarify that the Salem UTAH police department has zero involvement in this matter,” Salem Police wrote. “The recent law enforcement actions seen in the videos occurred in a neighboring jurisdiction and were NOT handled by the Salem Police Department.”
Salem Police asked the public to direct any questions or comments about the situation to the appropriate agency. “Thank you for helping us keep our lines clear for local emergencies!” they wrote.
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Copyright 2026 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to ABC4 Utah.
Source: Utah News
SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — Happy Monday, Utah! Our Monday afternoon will feature mostly sunny skies and warming conditions.
Daytime highs will climb into the upper 70s to lower 80s across northern Utah. Southern Utah will see plenty of 80s, with mid 90s likely for SW Utah.
Tuesday will feature mostly sunny skies and warmer temperatures. Daytime highs warm into the low to mid 80s across northern Utah with temperatures warming into the mid to upper 90s for SW Utah.
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A ridge of high pressure settles to our south on Wednesday, bringing the return of breezy conditions. SW winds will become sustained at around 15-25 mph, but gusts will likely exceed 30 mph at times.
The gusty winds will combine with the dry vegetation, low humidity levels, and hot temperatures to create elevated to critical fire danger across the state. Most outside burning should be avoided by mid to late week.
The sunshine will stick around Wednesday, leading to daytime high temperatures climbing into the upper 80s across northern Utah. Highs will warm into the upper 90s to near 100° in SW Utah.
The hot and dry trend will continue through the end of the week with mostly sunny skies. Daytime highs will warm near 90° across northern Utah. High temperatures will warm into the near 100° across SW Utah.
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View Utah Weather Radar in real time: CLICK HERE
A trough may try to approach Utah this upcoming weekend. Right now, this system looks to it is moving through on the dry side with very little moisture return. The system could bring a cooling trend to our temperatures by Sunday into early next week.
Stay with us for the latest updates from our 4Warn Weather forecast team on News4Utah+ and on abc4.com/utah-weather. We are Good4Utah!
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Copyright 2026 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to ABC4 Utah.
Source: Utah News
As Utah’s primary elections approach, U.S. Rep. Blake Moore and state Rep. Karianne Lisonbee faced each other for a debate in Salt Lake City on Monday evening. Both are running for the state’s 2nd Congressional District, which covers the northwestern section of the state.
Moore is the fifth-highest ranking House Republican and currently serves on several committees, including the powerful Ways and Means Committee, which is the primary force behind federal tax policy.
At several points during the debate, televised on PBS, Lisonbee took shots at Moore for his involvement in the state’s redistricting saga. Between 2017 and 2018, Moore served as a Republican chair for Better Boundaries, which later led to the creation of one left-leaning district.
Cattle graze on land proposed to be used for the Stratos Project data center in the Hansel Valley area of Box Elder County on Tuesday, May 12, 2026. This swath of land is the more eastern of the two largest sections of land proposed to be used for the data center. | Isaac Hale, Deseret News
Lisonbee said she was “not supportive at this point” of the recently approved data center in Box Elder County. There are “too many unanswered questions,” she said, referencing conflicting environmental reports about what the data center would do to the area.
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Moore offered support for the project but added, “water is paramount. We need to make sure we’re protecting that resource.” He said there may be better options of building data centers in a “more bit-sized approach,” but his main priority is to ensure that “key stakeholders are talking to each other.”
On Monday, Utah Senate President Stuart Adams asked the project developer Kevin O’Leary to scale down the land required from 40,000 acres to 10,000 acres.
When asked if he believes U.S.-based data centers are necessary for national security, Moore said, “We cannot lose this race to China, because we will deal with it (artificial intelligence) responsibly.“
Lisonbee didn’t say whether building data centers was necessary for national security.
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They both addressed the public’s hesitancy to embrace the project. Polling by the Deseret News and the Hinkley Institute of Politics showed more than half of Utahns are opposed to the data center.
“Obviously there was a dearth of information going out to the public,” Moore said. “I’m all about having a positive outlook on things, so this is a good opportunity to say, hey, there are problems within this process, and the public has had a chance to weigh in and weigh in heavily.”
When asked if she would support state and federal subsidies for data centers, Lisonbee said, “I firmly believe government should not be in the position of choosing winners and losers in the market. We should get out of the way and let the market work.”
The Great Salt Lake is seen from the Great Salt Lake State Park and Marina in Magna on Tuesday, April 21, 2026. | Tess Crowley, Deseret News
The federal Interior Department recently proposed that $1 billion of its $15.9 billion budget for 2027 go toward increasing the Great Salt Lake’s water levels.
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When asked what she would do to make sure that money ended up being used correctly, Lisonbee said, “I have some questions around where does the billion dollars come from? Is that more deficit spending that is going to drive up prices for everyday Utahns for the things that they need?”
Lisonbee added, “It’s going to take collaboration at the local, state and federal level to really solve our water issues here in the state.”
Responding to the same question, Moore said the money could go toward reducing the amount of phragmites, an invasive grass, that grows along the lake’s bank. He also referenced legislation he’d passed about saline lakes during his first term in office in 2021.
Candidate Blake Moore participates in the 2nd Congressional District GOP primary debate in Salt Lake City on Monday, June 1, 2026. | Francisco Kjolseth
Moore said he did not agree with Utah Supreme Court Judge Dianna Gibson’s handling of the Proposition 4 redistricting case.
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“If she ultimately deemed the legislation to be a statutory (problem), she should have given that back to the state legislature over and over again,” he said.
Lisonbee responded, “I truly can’t tell whether he’s naive or gaslighting the public. Truly, to suggest that because Blake gifted a seat to the Democrats in Utah, that Gavin Newsom will now magically decide to give a seat to the Republicans in California — it’s just not good policy.”
When given time to reply, Moore said, “When I was involved with this, I had no idea how anything was going to play out. But what’s important to remember is back in 2018, most of the states in the U.S. actually were moving to some type of redistricting reform.”
During a recent editorial board meeting with the Deseret News, Moore said he still views his initial efforts with Better Boundaries as the right thing. “It’s tough to do principled things in this job, but they’re still worth doing,” he said.
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He described the gerrymandering battles across the U.S. as a “race to the bottom” and added, “I want to be a part of it not existing.”
When asked what they would do to address the country’s $38 trillion debt, Moore referenced his Comprehensive Congressional Budget Act, which would make Congress vote on the entire budget every year, and the Fiscal Commission Act.
Lisonbee said she would cut out-of-control federal programs. Then she referenced fraud in Minnesota and California and said, “This is all under the leadership of our current congressman. … Congress controls the purse strings, but they don’t have a very firm grasp, and they need to start pulling.”
Candidates Karianne Lisonbee and Blake Moore participate in the 2nd Congressional District GOP primary debate in Salt Lake City on Monday, June 1, 2026. | Francisco Kjolseth
Moore responded, “I clearly don’t have any responsibility for what took place in Minneapolis,” then referenced his work on the Health Care Task Force, aimed at rooting out waste, fraud and abuse.
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Both Lisonbee and Moore promised to not take pay during government shutdowns.
Candidates Karianne Lisonbee and Blake Moore participate in the 2nd Congressional District GOP primary debate in Salt Lake City on Monday, June 1, 2026, moderated by Glen Mills. | Francisco Kjolseth
Lisonbee appeared to support the U.S.-Israeli-led strikes on Iran and the continued American presence in the Strait of Hormuz.
“I’m incredibly grateful for our armed forces, and I hate sending them to war,“ she said. ”But we must also put America first. I appreciate a president who is decisive, strategic and goes into conflict with a clear plan and strategy by destabilizing Iran’s power.“
She said she believes the operation has strengthened the U.S. energy market to China’s detriment, adding, “We also need to be more strategic and surgical in how we advance American interests abroad.”
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Moore said, “I believe we’re in a strong position for President Trump to make a final deal. I don’t know if the deal is going to solve all the problems, but we can continue to monitor.”
Utah’s primary election is June 23.
Source: Utah News

June 1, 2026, 11:41 a.m. ET
A Utah man has been charged in connection with an alleged child abduction attempt in Livingston County.
Ryan Josue Rojas, 20, was arraigned through the 53rd District Court on one count of accosting a minor for immoral purposes, according to Michigan State Police.
Troopers on May 27 responded to the Rosemary Lane area in Brighton Township after receiving a report of an attempted child abduction, MSP said.
A man told troopers his 8-year-old daughter was approached by a man who appeared to be a traveling salesman and told her to come into the woods, where he would give the girl “a surprise,” state police said in a release.
The man then tried to lure the child before her father confronted him, according to the statement.
MSP announced Thursday they were searching for the suspect. They identified him as Rojas on Sunday, after he was arraigned, and said Auburn Hills police assisted them in his apprehension.
His bond was set at $250,000 on the condition that he wear a GPS tether and not have contact with anyone under 18 years old, according to the release.
mbryan@detroitnews.com
Source: Utah News
June 1, 2026, 5:10 a.m. ET
This is what happens when you make a deal with the private equity devil, when panic supersedes sensibility and all that’s left is an all users email and a skillfully-worded statement from a public relations hack trying to put out a fire.
Gee, who could’ve seen this coming?
A public university, desperate to stay relevant in an ever-changing college sports landscape, sells its soul for private equity cash. And now here come the layoffs.
My shocked face.
Utah needed money, Otro Capital offered a mirage of an oasis to a parched program, and the next thing you know, the university is $500 million to the good — and still firing employees.
Check me if I’m wrong, Sparky, but half a billion seems like enough cash to keep everyone employed.
In an email sent to athletic department employees and obtained by the Salt Lake Tribune, Utah athletic director Mark Harlan described the firings as — are you ready for this? — “impacted employees” of an “unsettling process” during their “transition.”
Then came the official response from an athletic department spokesperson, and it wasn’t much better.
“In preparation for the growth of Crimson Brand Partners, the university has begun the process of transitioning select units of some university operations to the new company. The first step of that process requires the discontinuation of the individual positions in those units through a reduction in force (RIF), to be followed by CBP’s hiring process.”
I’m gonna puke.
This is the problem with inviting the private equity wolf through the door: No matter what moves are made, it’s seen through the lens of green and greed.
The university will retain a majority ownership of CBP (estimated at 66%) commercial operations, including but not limited to ticketing, licensing, NIL sales and sponsorships. Otro gets an estimated 33%.
The only way this thing works is if — and it’s big IF — Utah makes a boatload of cash in a college sports environment currently drowning in the deep end of inflation. A college landscape, mind you, that changes by the month and is wildly unstable.
This week, the Saving College Sports bill will begin to work its way through Congress — a journey so wrought with political pitfalls, it will be a minor miracle if tribal caucuses in both the House and Senate pass it and send the bill to President Trump to sign into law.
But understand this: The SEC and Big Ten aren’t required to sign off on the critical monetary addendum of the bill. The two super conferences — who earn nearly double (or more) in media rights fees than the rest of the FBS conferences — aren’t required to pool media rights with the other conferences, per the bill.
Pooled media rights — going to the market as one entity instead of 10 different entities and potentially earning more money collectively — is the very thing that could allegedly save programs currently dying on the vine. Or those desperate enough to invite the private equity wolf through the door.
But it takes all 10 FBS conferences (including the SEC and Big Ten) to earn a projected significant spike in media rights fees, and the SEC said last week it will keep its individual deal. The Big Ten is expected to the do the same.
A more dangerous scenario for Utah: The bill doesn’t pass, and the SEC and Big Ten are emboldened and break away as a collective unit to avoid the next bill(s) trying to prevent further conference expansion and a Big Ten/SEC breakaway (which the current bill stipulates).
If the Big Ten and SEC break away, Utah’s ability to generate revenue could take a significant hit — with Otro still owning 33% of the company.
Imagine that email from Harlan, or whoever is running the joint.
“We’re now in the process of transitioning from hoping and praying this thing would work, to getting our financial tail handed to us. Please bear with us through these unsettling transitory times impacting the reduction of force of our fellow select units.”
Or some other cock and bull story.
The Salt Lake Tribune said a select number of employees expected to be fired and potentially rehired by CBP is currently unknown, and the university spokesperson would not share a number.
This, of course, leads to the obvious question: What is the “select number” to be “potentially” rehired? If any at all?
This is a private equity tale as old as time, people. Cash comes in, the employee herd is thinned, and money is all that matters. These people aren’t your friends, and aren’t focused on winning championships.
They’re in it as an investment. If winning a championship leads to more money, great. Either way, they’re getting their 33%.
And if it’s not the 33% they envisioned, you can bet your bottom dollar there will be more “transitory” moves and “unsettling” processes until it is.
This is the same Utah athletic department that wanted so badly to push out football coach Kyle Whittingham at the end of a 10-win season in 2025, it was willing to pay him $13.5 million over the next two years to do so.
Harlan and university attorneys called the payoff — are you ready for this? — a “transition bonus.”
My shocked face.
Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.
Source: Utah News
Source: Utah News
Source: Utah News