Utah student arrested in Colorado is released, describes ‘nightmare’ ICE detention

Caroline Dias Goncalves spent more than two weeks in immigration custody after she was arrested in Grand Junction on June 5.

A 19-year-old University of Utah student who was arrested by federal immigration officers in Colorado earlier this month was released from federal custody Friday, according to a national advocacy group.

Caroline Dias Goncalves spent more than two weeks in immigration custody after she was arrested in Grand Junction on June 5. In a statement Monday, she called the 15 days she was confined to an Aurora detention center as the “hardest of my life.”

A Mesa County sheriff’s deputy pulled Dias Goncalves over for a traffic stop on Interstate 70 near Fruita on June 5 because she was following a semitrailer too closely. The deputy let Dias Goncalves go with a warning, but only after asking about her accent and discovering she was born in Brazil. He then shared information about her in a Signal group chat between local and federal law enforcement.

The group chat was created as part of a regional drug interdiction effort, but federal authorities in the chat used the information the deputy shared to target Dias Goncalves for immigration enforcement. She was stopped again in Grand Junction — a few miles down the road — and arrested by federal immigration agents, according to the sheriff’s office, which later pulled its deputies from the chat.

Dias Goncalves immigrated to the United States when she was 7 and her family overstayed a tourist visa, according to reporting from the Salt Lake Tribune, which also reported the family has a pending asylum application.

In a statement from TheDream.US., an organization that gives scholarships and ongoing support to undocumented immigrant students who don’t qualify for federal financial aid, Dias Goncalves called her detention a “nightmare.” She received a scholarship from TheDream.US to attend the University of Utah, and the organization has continued to support her after her arrest.

“In detention, we were given soggy, wet food — even the bread would come wet,” she said in the statement. “We were kept on confusing schedules. And the moment they realized I spoke English, I saw a change. Suddenly, I was treated better than others who didn’t speak English. That broke my heart. Because no one deserves to be treated like that. Not in a country that I’ve called home since I was 7 years old and is all I’ve ever known.”

Her attorney, Jon Hyman, did not immediately return a request for comment Monday. In a previous statement, he said Dias Goncalves’ arrest was the result of “improper coordination between local law enforcement and ICE.”

Source: Utah News

Red, white and blue pride: So where does Utah land in a national ‘patriotism’ poll?

Beehive State ranks at the top in the nation in multiple “volunteer” metrics — but received lower numbers in “military engagement” areas.

KEY POINTS

  • Utah ranks No. 12 in nationwide patriotism poll.
  • The Beehive State receives top national scores in multiple “volunteer” categories — while receiving much lower scores in “military engagement.”
  • WalletHub poll ranks Virginia as the most patriotic state in the country.

Patriotism is an oft-spoken word around Independence Day — and whenever there are historic moments grabbing Americans’ attention, such as U.S. military conflicts or a presidential election.

Given the fast-approaching Fourth of July holiday and the developing military crisis in Iran, Utahns can expect to hear plenty of talk about patriotism — and what it means to be a patriot.

It’s a complex subject that, while widely admired, is not always agreeably defined.

So where does the Beehive State rank on the “Red-White-&-Blue Pride Scale” compared to other states?

Pretty high — but not quite in the Top-10, according to a recently released WalletHub report.

Utah is ranked 12th in the “2025’s Most Patriotic States in America” report that measures 13 key indicators ranging from military enlistment numbers and veteran populations to volunteerism and voting in presidential elections.

“The most patriotic states have a lot of residents who serve or have served in the armed forces, high voter turnouts during elections and a high share of the population volunteering with national or local organizations,” noted WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo.

”Patriotism also isn’t concentrated in any one particular area — the top states are located in vastly different geographic regions.”

Utah’s celebrated volunteer rates are the primary reason for its top-12 report ranking in the patriotism study.

The state claimed the nation’s top spot in the “volunteer rate” and in the “volunteer hours per resident” metrics. Utah has an overall “civic engagement” ranking of No. 9.

But Utah’s overall patriotism ranking takes a bit of a hit because it’s on the back-half of the report’s “Military Engagement” ranking — coming in at No. 35.

Daniel Luke, of Kaysville, tends to the grave of his father-in-law, Charles Gordon Neerings, at the Utah Veterans Cemetery and Memorial Park in Bluffdale on Wednesday, May 21, 2025. Neerings served in the U.S. Merchant Marines, Coast Guard and Army. | Isaac Hale, Deseret News

Report: How to measure patriotism

In determining the most patriotic states, WalletHub compared all 50 states across two key dimensions: “civic engagement” and ”military engagement.”

The civic dimension counted for 75% of the scoring and included metrics such as a state’s share of adults who voted in the 2024 presidential election — along with several weighted volunteerism metrics such as “volunteers hours per resident” and service in volunteer organizations such as the Peace Corps.

Civic engagement points were also awarded for jury participation and whether a state requires civics education in school.

Utah: A volunteerism and civic education hub

Research recently gathered by the University of Utah’s Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute on the benefits of higher education revealed that Utah possesses greater income equality than any other state — while “ranking first for both formal volunteerism and informal helping among all 50 states.”

Volunteers Eric Hodgson and Cole Dugdale, Cottonwood Canyons Foundation trail crew members, do trail work on Burch Hollow Trail in Millcreek Canyon on Friday, June 6, 2025. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

Informal helping is defined as the estimated share of residents who exchange favors with neighbors and do things like house sitting, watching each other’s children and lending tools to each other.

Institutionally, volunteerism and humanitarian service are also rewarded in Utah.

The University of Utah, for example, recently announced it would offer academic credit to students for “prior learning and service” that includes voluntary religious missions and participation in the Peace Corps and AmeriCorps.

Meanwhile, a recently passed law now requires graduating Utah high school students to pass 3.5 units of social studies — including a yearlong course on American constitutional government and citizenship.

Lower military engagement scores

Utah finished No. 35 in WalletHub’s “military engagement” dimension — which accounted for a quarter of the total points awarded in the patriotism report.

Command Sgt. Maj. Richard Thalman shakes hands with Sgt. 1st Class Jeremy Smuin during a farewell ceremony for the Utah Army National Guard’s  115th Engineer Facility Detachment, 204th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade, at the Sunrise Hall Chapel at Camp Williams on Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2023. Smuin and the brigade are deploying to Kuwait to support base facilities for Operation Spartan Shield. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

The report’s military-related metrics included the average military enlistees per 1,000 civilian adults between 2016 and 2021, veterans per 1,000 civilian adults, active-duty military personnel per 100,000 civilian adults, and the share of civilian adult population in military reserves.

A separate WalletHub study recently ranked Utah No. 29 in the state’s ability to provide veterans with a comfortable military retirement. In that study, the Beehive State scored high marks in economic factors — but much lower scores in quality of life and health care rankings.

‘Old Dominion’ tops patriotism report

So which state claimed WalletHub’s top spot in its 2025 patriotism report? Virginia.

For every 100,000 civilians in Virginia, there are over 1,850 active-duty military personnel, the third-most in the country, according to the report. And for every 1,000 civilians, there are over 103 veterans, the second-most in the country.

Virginia also ranks high on the report’s civic side.

The commonwealth has a high voter turnout rate, with 72.9% of residents having voted in the 2024 presidential election, compared to the national average of 66%.

Virginia also has the fifth-highest number of Peace Corps volunteers per capita, and it is one of the many states that require a standalone course in civics for high school graduation, according to the report.

The other four states numbered among the patriotism report’s top-5 list include Montana, Vermont, Colorado and Oregon.

Arkansas, meanwhile, is at the bottom of Wallethub’s “Most Patriotic States” list. It’s ranked No. 29 in “military engagement” and No. 50 in civic engagement.

Source: Utah News

Vote on repealing Utah’s anti-labor union law will happen during 2026 midterms, Gov. Cox decides

Gov. Spencer Cox announced Monday that he would not move up the vote on whether to repeal an anti-labor law to this November, meaning it will be on the ballot Nov. 3, 2026.

A vote on whether to repeal a law banning public employee unions from negotiating contracts with their government employers won’t be on the ballot until Nov. 3, 2026, Gov. Spencer Cox announced Monday.

The governor had the option of calling a special election to put it before voters during municipal elections this November, but that would have come with some additional costs and logistical challenges.

In 2023, when the state had a special election to replace retiring 2nd Congressional District Rep. Chris Stewart, lawmakers allocated $2.5 million to cover the extra costs.

While many cities and towns have elections this November, some races are not contested — in Salt Lake City, for example, just four of the seven council districts are up — and voters in unincorporated areas of counties would not normally vote in those elections either.

Holding the vote in 2025, however, could have been beneficial for some lawmakers by ensuring that they would not be up for reelection at the same time as the vote on whether to repeal the anti-labor bill, Utah State University political scientist Damon Cann said recently.

The referendum could drive voter turnout and impact the outcome in swing districts.

Last session, Republican lawmakers passed HB267, a bill banning government entities from negotiating with public employee unions. Its main impact was on teacher unions, but it also impacted some police officers, firefighters, health care workers, librarians, and others.

Labor groups fought back, collecting more than 320,000 signatures in 30 days — 251,590 were eventually deemed valid — from voters to put a measure on the ballot to repeal the law, making it the most successful signature-gathering effort in state history.

The law has been put on hold pending the outcome of the November 2026 election.

Both the labor backers of the repeal effort and a group supporting the law and opposing repeal have said they were indifferent when the vote occurs and that their side would prevail, whether it is held this November or next.

If Cox had decided to call a special election, it would not have been the first time in Utah. In 2007, then-Gov. Jon Huntsman called a special election for a referendum to repeal the Legislature’s school voucher law. Utahns voted two-to-one to repeal the voucher law.

Source: Utah News

Opinion: Medicaid saves lives – Utah’s leaders should reject cuts and barriers

In the case of cancer patients, tumors can cause symptoms and threaten lives before they are even detected. A person can spend years in pain, confined to a bed or a wheelchair, without a formal …

In the case of cancer patients, tumors can cause symptoms and threaten lives before they are even detected. A person can spend years in pain, confined to a bed or a wheelchair, without a formal …

Source: Utah News

Man arrested after shooting death at Utah ‘No Kings’ protest released from jail

Judge James Blanch signed an order to release Arturo Gamboa after state prosecutors were “unable to make an informed decision” on charges against him.

Source: Utah News

Utah Grizzlies exploring possible sale of the organization

The Utah Grizzlies announced on social media Sunday evening they have begun the process of exploring a potential sale of the team. “This is an emotional and difficult moment for our family and our …

WEST VALLEY CITY, Utah (ABC4) — The Utah Grizzlies announced on social media Sunday evening they have begun the process of exploring a potential sale of the team.

“This is an emotional and difficult moment for our family and our organization,” the Elmore Sports Group, current owners of the Grizzlies, said in a statement. “Utah has been more than a home—it has been part of our identity. But ensuring the Grizzlies have the opportunity to thrive in the future may require new ownership and, potentially, a new home.”

Advertisement

The team says in their statement the decision to explore a sale follows a period of transition for the longtime owners, following the death of former owner Dave Elmore in 2023 and the declining health of current co-owner Donna Tuttle.

The Grizzlies will compete in the 2025-26 season as normal.

No official sale or possible relocation has been finalized as both will require formal approval from the ECHL and other stakeholders.

The Grizzlies have been playing in Utah since 1995 when the team moved from Denver and have been playing at the Maverik Center since its opening in 1997.

Full statement from the Utah Grizzlies:

Advertisement

Copyright 2025 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

Tiny town of Pinto evacuated as southern Utah wildfire spreads

The tiny community of Pinto, located about 14 miles north of Pine Valley, is now under evacuation orders as the Forsyth Fire continues to spread.

The tiny community of Pinto, located about 14 miles north of Pine Valley, is now under evacuation orders as the Forsyth Fire continues to spread.

Residents with trucks and trailers were seen leaving the remote settlement, which is only accessible by dirt road and difficult to find on maps. Some evacuees were transporting farm animals from the area’s numerous agricultural properties.

Others were arriving to help friends and neighbors evacuate their belongings and livestock.

“I came up to get my friend’s camp trailer and maybe drive a side-by-side down to Newcastle just to make sure it was out of the fire if it came down this way,” Jamie Gardner said.

The Salt Lake Tribune and Fox 13 News are content-sharing partners.

Source: Utah News

Protesters rally against Velvet-Wood uranium mine: ‘Don’t fast-track Utah into a wasteland’

About 20 people gathered in San Juan County on Saturday to protest the planned reopening of the Velvet-Wood uranium mine.

As high-desert winds swept through under a late-morning sun, a small group gathered Saturday on public land east of Lisbon Valley to protest the reopening of the Velvet-Wood uranium mine — Utah’s first project approved under a federal fast-track process tied to a declared national energy emergency.

The protest drew about 20 people to a site just over four miles from the Velvet-Wood mine in San Juan County, which will produce both uranium and vanadium. Uranium can be processed into fuel for nuclear reactors, while vanadium is commonly used in steel alloys.

From that vantage point, attendees could see the rugged hills in the distance, with the mine sites tucked behind them. Wind whipped through handmade banners that read “Don’t fast-track Utah into a wasteland,” “Keep Shootaring Mill closed” and “Stop Velvet-Wood Uranium Mine.”

“This cannot be happening,” said Luis Miranda, one of the organizers. “We are fast-tracking ourselves into creating a wasteland in Utah out of this precious environment. Today, we’re gathered here because we need to do something about this.”

The Velvet‑Wood project, owned by Canadian company Anfield Energy Inc., was approved by the Bureau of Land Management in May — just 11 days after the Interior Department ordered the agency to complete an environmental review within 14 days. That directive came in the wake of a January executive order from President Donald Trump declaring a “national energy emergency,” which allowed federal agencies to shorten certain reviews from months or years to as little as two weeks.

Critics say the accelerated timeline bypasses meaningful environmental analysis and public input.

(Andrew Christiansen | The Times-Independent)
Protest organizer Luis Miranda points toward the Velvet-Wood mine site the group was protesting, located just over four miles beyond the ridgeline behind him near Lisbon Valley.

“This fast-tracked permitting is reckless, unjust and dangerous,” said Ava Curtis, an environmental justice coordinator with a New Mexico-based coalition focused on uranium mining impacts and one of the protest’s organizers. “There’s just no way to ensure safety in such a short amount of time.”

The protest was the first of two being held Saturday. After the Velvet-Wood gathering, some participants planned to caravan 180 miles along the proposed ore transport route to the dormant Shootaring Canyon Mill near Ticaboo, which Anfield also plans to reopen. The route crosses tribal lands, Bears Ears National Monument and the Colorado River — raising concerns about potential contamination from uranium-laden trucks.

“These projects enrich foreign investors while endangering U.S. communities and sacred lands,” the press release about the event stated. “Permitting uranium operations that impact sovereign tribal lands, water systems and national monuments without public or tribal consent is a violation of trust.”

The Velvet-Wood site, which produced about 400,000 tons of ore between 1979 and 1984 before shutting down, now contains more than 5 million pounds of uranium ore, according to Anfield. The company says reopening the mine will disturb only three additional acres. If the Shootaring Mill does not reopen, the White Mesa Mill near Blanding — owned by Energy Fuels — remains a possible site for processing.

While the Bureau of Land Management has approved the project’s environmental assessment, Anfield still needs multiple state and federal permits before mining can begin. The Utah Division of Oil, Gas and Mining must approve the mine plan; the Division of Water Quality must sign off on a pilot water treatment plan; and the Division of Air Quality must authorize construction and modification of ventilation shafts. The U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration also must approve mine safety infrastructure, and the project may still require local land-use or utility permits.

Curtis said she’s particularly alarmed by Anfield’s plan to pump and treat more than 50 million gallons of water currently stored in the mine.

“There’s the concern about specific health impacts of this mine — how it affects the community and the water — but also the precedent this sets for future extraction of uranium and other critical minerals,” she said.

State and federal officials have embraced the project as part of Utah’s broader effort to become a leader in the domestic nuclear energy supply chain. The state’s energy strategy includes investments in small modular reactors, uranium enrichment and fuel-processing infrastructure. In May, Gov. Spencer Cox praised the Velvet-Wood mine as an example of “a faster, more efficient permitting process” that supports energy independence.

U.S. Sen. John Curtis called the mine “vital,” citing national security concerns and the need to reduce uranium imports from Russia and China.

Miranda said those arguments overlook the environmental and social costs.

“What I’m seeing is a lot of false solutions,” he said. “Multinational companies get contracts to build these things that come at a constant cost to ratepayers, when we have other forms of energy.”

Jessica Wiarda, a Hopi researcher working in Utah through a fellowship with the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, said uranium extraction often parallels colonization.

“It’s like a poison,” she said, describing uranium’s visual similarity to corn pollen, a sacred substance in many Native cultures. “Instead of worshipping the corn, some people are worshipping the yellowcake instead.”

Uranium’s path from mine to reactor begins with ore extraction. The ore is then processed at a mill into a concentrated powder called yellowcake, which is converted into gas and enriched before being turned into fuel pellets used in nuclear reactors.

Several members of the White Mesa Community — a Ute Mountain Ute village south of Blanding — also attended the protest. Residents there have long opposed the nearby White Mesa Mill, the country’s only operational conventional uranium mill.

“Our lands that belong to us … look how beautiful it is out here,” said Yolanda Badback. “Digging holes in the ground and hurting our Mother Earth, it’s like hurting us. She hurts as well.”

Local residents helped coordinate the protest through Moab Mutual Aid.

“The land needs us,” said Rachel Gravens, representing Moab Mutual Aid. “It is not just empty space. It isn’t just used for extraction. It is sacred and we need to be here to speak up for it and protect it.”

For Miranda, Saturday’s gathering was one step in a larger campaign against the extractive industry on the Colorado Plateau.

“This fight did not begin last month or with the Trump administration,” he said. “This land was stolen centuries ago and continues to be colonized. We continue to destroy the only possibility of a future beyond climate catastrophe.”

Source: Utah News

Utah receives commitment from 3-star WR

Wide receiver Perrion Williams pledged his commitment to the University of Utah during his official visit to Salt Lake City.

There’s never a dull moment in college football recruiting.

That was the case on Saturday night, as three-star wide receiver Perrion Williams pledged his commitment to the University of Utah during his official visit to Salt Lake City.

Source: Utah News