48 years after teen girl’s murder in Hawaii, her former schoolmate is arrested in Utah

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Honolulu Police say modern forensic tests allowed them to identify and arrest a suspect in Dawn Momohara’s 1977 murder.

New DNA technology allows investigator better chance at solving decades old cold cases


New DNA technology allows investigator better chance at solving decades old cold cases

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Police have arrested a suspect in the unsolved murder of a Honolulu teenager, whose death rocked the high school where her body was discovered almost five decades ago. They said the man arrested, Gideon Castro, was one of her former schoolmates who joined the U.S. Army Reserve after graduating.

Dawn Momohara was found dead the morning of March 21, 1977, on the second floor of a building at McKinley High School, in Hawaii’s capital, according to the Honolulu Police Department. She was 16 and a student there in her sophomore year.

Officers at the time showed up to a gruesome scene. Momohara was partially clothed and lying on her back with an orange cloth tied around her neck, said Lt. Deena Thoemmes, of Honolulu Police, at a Tuesday news conference. A subsequent autopsy ruled Momohara was strangled to death, and the medical examiner said there were signs of sexual assault.

Although police retrieved an unknown man’s DNA sample from the teenager’s clothing, they could not identify a suspect. Authorities would not develop meaningful leads in the homicide until 2020, after a cold case detective re-submitted evidence for forensic exams using updated technology.

momohara.png
Dawn Momohara.

Honolulu Police Department


By September 2023, the DNA tests led investigators to two possible suspects: brothers Gideon Castro and William Castro, who had both been interviewed in the immediate aftermath of Momohara’s killing. Back then, Gideon Castro told police he met Momohara at a school dance in 1976, just before he graduated, police said. William Castro in those interviews said he and Momohara periodically talked on the phone but denied ever being in any kind of relationship with her.

Once forensic tests narrowed down the pool of potential suspects to the Castro brothers, Thoemmes said police traveled to Chicago, where William Castro lived, to obtain a DNA sample secretly from one of his children and use it as a comparison. The comparison excluded William Castro as a suspect, and Gideon Castro, now 66, was arrested at his nursing home in Utah on a second-degree murder charge.

Gideon Castro will be extradited back to Honolulu, Thoemmes said.

“On behalf of the Honolulu Police Department, I want to thank all the individuals and agencies that made today’s arrest possible,” the lieutenant said. “Thank you for all your dedication and commitment to the tireless purusit of justice for Dawn and the Momohara family.”

Source: Utah News

Century mark: Lobo women sprint past Utah State, 101-78

Viané Cumber scored a game-high 25 points to match her career high, and Alyssa Hargrove put up a stellar overall game for the Lobos, who improved to 13-7 overall, 6-1 …



It’s fair to say the UNM women’s basketball team beat Utah State at its own game Tuesday night.

The visiting Lobos appeared more than happy to engage the pressing Aggies in an baseline-to-baseline track meet, and why not? Four players scored 15 points or more for New Mexico, which shot 58% from the field and rolled to a 101-78 victory at the Dee Smith Spectrum in Logan, Utah.



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Source: Utah News

Senate Pres. Adams warns Utah could be the next ‘Petri dish of America’

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Adams said the Legislature will draft another constitutional amendment to expand their power to change citizen initiatives.

Utah Senate President Stuart Adams warned that if the state fails to respond to a recent court ruling that limited legislative changes to citizen initiatives then Utah could become the next “Petri dish of America.”

Adams predicted that lawmakers will draft language for another constitutional amendment before the 2026 election cycle to work around the Utah Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Legislature’s limited ability to reform citizen ballot initiatives.

“The people in Utah that are elected ought to be making decisions for people in Utah,” Adams, R-Layton, told reporters on Tuesday.

How did we get here?

In July, the Utah Supreme Court ruled that the Utah Constitution prohibits lawmakers from altering the results of citizen-led ballot initiatives that reform the government unless the changes are narrowly tailored to meet a compelling government interest.

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In September, the state’s highest court upheld a decision from a 3rd District Court judge that voided “Amendment D,” a ballot initiative crafted by legislative leadership that would have amended the Utah Constitution to allow lawmakers to amend or repeal citizen initiatives in all cases.

But the Utah Legislature is far from ready to cede their ability to amend laws passed via ballot initiative.

Is Utah becoming more like Oregon?

Adams insisted that continuing with the court decision would undermine the state’s republican form of government and would set the state on a path to becoming like California and Oregon.

Adams recounted a conversation he had with the Democratic senate president of Oregon, where a ballot initiative decriminalizing hard drugs wreaked havoc for four years before the legislature stepped in last year with a recriminalization law.

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Oregon’s citizen initiative policy made it “the Petri dish of America,” this lawmaker reportedly told Adams. “Every crazy idea in America is passed with an initiative in Oregon,” Adams said.

Citizen initiatives are often driven by activist groups from other states, Adams pointed out. The 2020 Oregon initiative that legalized the possession of all drugs was funded by an organization from New York City.

“Out-of-state companies coming in and running initiatives like that are destroying states,” Adams said.

Another constitutional amendment

Other states have attempted to prohibit foreign influences on ballot initiatives. But these laws have been held up by court challenges on First Amendment grounds, according to Sen. Kirk Cullimore, R-Draper.

Passing this kind of restriction on special interests through a constitutional amendment before all Utah voters could put it on stronger legal footing, Cullimore said.

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Voters can only vote on a constitutional amendment during a presidential election year. Adams said he isn’t sure whether the Legislature will pass a bill to place another constitutional amendment on the ballot this session or next.

The last time lawmakers attempted to amend the state Constitution to allow changes to all citizen-led ballot initiatives, the effort was struck down because of misleading language and the failure to adequately advertise the amendment.

“We have served the people well, and I’m just really concerned that out-of-state groups will come in and spend the money and destroy all that we’ve done here,” Adams said.

Source: Utah News

Utah’s 2025 legislative session begins today. Here’s how to get involved.

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It’s the first Tuesday after the third Monday in January, meaning the Utah Legislature will gavel themselves into session for their 45-day marathon of annual lawmaking this morning. Here’s how you can …

It’s the first Tuesday after the third Monday in January, meaning the Utah Legislature will gavel themselves into session for their 45-day marathon of annual lawmaking this morning. Here’s how you can …

Source: Utah News

Keller returns from eye injury, scores as Utah Hockey Club beats Winnipeg Jets

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When they woke up on Monday, the Utah Hockey Club was 7-11-4 at home. Their Monday opponents, the Winnipeg Jets, were 13-8-0 on the road. Naturally, the second-place Jets were the heavy favorites in …

When they woke up on Monday, the Utah Hockey Club was 7-11-4 at home. Their Monday opponents, the Winnipeg Jets, were 13-8-0 on the road. Naturally, the second-place Jets were the heavy favorites in …

Source: Utah News

Utah beats Jets 5-2 for 2nd straight home victory

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Connor Ingram made 23 saves and Olli Maatta scored his first goal for the Utah Hockey Club in a 5-2 victory over Winnipeg Jets.

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Connor Ingram made 23 saves and Olli Maatta scored his first goal for the Utah Hockey Club in a 5-2 victory over Winnipeg Jets on Monday night.

Logan Cooley, Barrett Hayton, Matias Maccelli and Clayton Keller also scored to help Utah win its second consecutive home game. Hayton, Josh Doan and Nick Schmaltz each had two assists.

Connor Hellebuyck stopped 23 shots for Winnipeg. Nino Niederreiter and Dylan DeMelo scored in the third period as the Jets avoided their second shutout loss of the season.

Keller headed to the dressing room a minute into the second after a shot from teammate Michael Kesselring deflected high and struck him in the face. Keller returned, with swelling and a cut above his eye, with 4:40 left in the period.

He helped set up Maatta’s drive 40 seconds later that put Utah on the board. Cooley extended the lead on a breakaway with 17.9 seconds remaining in the second.

Hayton and Maccelli each scored early in the third to make it 4-0 before Niederreiter and DeMelo scored 3:16 apart to cut the deficit in half with 8:12 left.

Keller capped the scoring with an empty-netter with 2:05 remaining.

Takeaways

Jets: Played their first road game in January after opening 2025 with eight straight at home.

Utah: Tough defense carried Utah, which allowed one shot on goal over the first 10 minutes and kept Winnipeg off the scoreboard until almost midway through the third period.

Key moment

Maatta and Cooley scored 3:42 apart late in the second to spark an offensive surge for Utah.

Key stat

Utah is averaging 3.8 goals over its last four games.

Up next

Winnipeg visits Colorado on Wednesday, while Utah plays at Minnesota on Thursday.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Source: Utah News

Utah’s Clayton Keller exits in second period against Jets after getting struck in face with puck

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Utah captain Clayton Keller went to the locker room a minute into the second period against the Winnipeg Jets on Tuesday night after a puck struck him the face. A shot from teammate Michael Kesselring …

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah captain Clayton Keller went to the locker room a minute into the second period against the Winnipeg Jets on Tuesday night after a puck struck him the face.

A shot from teammate Michael Kesselring got deflected high and the puck struck Keller. He immediately ripped off his helmet, skated off the ice, and headed straight to the locker room.

Keller eventually returned to the ice with 4:40 left in the second with swelling and a cut above his eye. He assisted on Utah’s first goal of the game 40 seconds later and added an empty-netter late in the 5-2 win over the Jets.

“I got lucky,” said Keller, who sported a dozen stitches and a bruised eyelid following the game. “It didn’t catch my eye. It was so fast, you don’t feel much. But I tried to look through my eye and I knew I could, so I wasn’t really too worried after that.”

His quick return and toughness shifted momentum in Utah’s favor and led to a second straight home victory to cap a seven-game homestand.

“Coming back without hesitation, without a doubt in his head — that was great,” Utah coach Andre Tourigny said.

Keller has 10 goals and 20 assists over his last 22 games. He had a goal and three assists in Utah’s 4-2 win over St. Louis on Saturday, matching his NHL career high with four points. Keller leads the expansion club in points (50) and assists (34) this season.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Source: Utah News

Risk of frostbite to be especially high in Utah during upcoming week, experts say

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Frostbite is more than just feeling cold when you are outdoors during the winter. It is a condition that will cause more problems than a pair of gloves can correct.

Frostbite is more than just feeling cold when you are outdoors during the winter. It is a condition that will cause more problems than a pair of gloves can correct.

The University of Utah Hospital, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Mayo Clinic and other medical centers warn that frostbite can affect any area of the body, but hands, feet, nose, ears, and any other extremities that have been exposed to cold temperatures are at a greater risk for the injury. After a long period of time in the cold, tissue in the body can start to freeze, causing frostbite.

Chances are, you have experienced the first stage of the condition, referred to as frostnip: numbness in your fingers, for example, and/or tingling and pain and redness where the exposure took place. If you have ever had the pain and tingling feeling after the numbness goes away, you also have experienced the first stage.

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The hope is, however, not to experience stages 1 through 4, which include blisters, tissue damage and amputations. Covering up and keeping warm can help keep these stages at bay, according to medical professionals.

Director of University of Utah Health Burn Center Giavonni Lewis, left, and University of Utah Health Burn Center community outreach coordinator Courtney Lawrence address frostbite at a press conference outside the University of Utah Hospital in Salt Lake City on Friday. | Tess Crowley, Deseret News

Director of University of Utah Health Burn Center Giavonni Lewis, left, and University of Utah Health Burn Center community outreach coordinator Courtney Lawrence address frostbite at a press conference outside the University of Utah Hospital in Salt Lake City on Friday. | Tess Crowley, Deseret News

“I feel like a lot of people forget about frostbite in the winter. We go off skiing and enjoy our time,” said Dr. Giavonni Lewis, medical director for the University of Utah Burn Center, where frostbite cases are typically treated. “What we tend to recommend is for everyone to bundle up as much as possible.”

Lewis spoke to reporters regarding the dangers of frostbite on Friday morning, where she and Dr. Irma Fleming, a surgeon in the University of Utah Hospital Burn Center, spoke of the ways one gets frostbite, as well as how to be aware of the symptoms and know who is at risk

More about frostbite:

Symptoms

  • Pain, tingling, burning, numbness or aching.

  • Skin that is paler than normal, cold and hard.

  • Redness or pain.

  • A white or grayish-yellow skin area.

  • Skin that feels abnormally firm or waxy.

  • Blisters in the first 24 hours.

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While frostbite can affect any part of the body, it most commonly affects:

If you or someone you know experience any symptoms, contact your doctor immediately.

Source: University of Utah Hospital and the Mayo Clinic

While people accustomed to cold weather may practice putting on hats, gloves, scarves and thermal pants when they leave the house in the winter, those new to the cold weather may have the biggest problems, Lewis said. Those bright, sunny days can be deceiving to people from other parts of the country who equate sunshine and blue skies with warmer weather and less covering up of appendages.

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The population with the highest risk for frostbite, however, are not skiing tourists or new Utah transplants but those living in homelessness.

At the moment, every shelter in Salt Lake County is at capacity, but during “code blue” warnings, when the temperature is expected to be 18 degrees Fahrenheit or below — including wind chill — for at least two hours, capacity for the homeless can expand, said Tricia Davis Winter, director of the Office of Homeless Services.

Director of Utah Office of Homeless Services Tricia Davis Winter addresses Code Blue Alerts at a press conference outside the University of Utah Hospital in Salt Lake City on Friday. | Tess Crowley, Deseret News

Director of Utah Office of Homeless Services Tricia Davis Winter addresses Code Blue Alerts at a press conference outside the University of Utah Hospital in Salt Lake City on Friday. | Tess Crowley, Deseret News

State law also requires that efforts are made to speak with anyone living unsheltered in the county about the dangers of the decreasing temperatures and the ability to stay indoors during the code blue warning. While it may seem difficult to reach everyone, experienced outreach teams, websites, social services agency staff and shelter employees and volunteers speak to as many people as possible about the code blue, Davis Winter said.

Although expectations of 18 degrees can trigger a code blue message, doctors note that their medical reporting highlights 32 degrees as the potential frostbite temperature. Fleming spoke of the complexities with that: If someone is wet while in the wintry outdoors, including in the feet, the temperature does not need to reach the freezing point. Higher temperatures can also invite frostbite if one is cold and sweating, she said.

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She strongly suggests that if you or anyone you know — children included — suspect frostbite, contact a medical professional so they can take a look at it and determine treatment.

“Lucky for us, we support five states, so even if you’re not here in the Salt Lake area … we can always give pointers about care,” Fleming said.

Source: Utah News

‘A sister on my side’: How a Utah all-girls soccer team provides community beyond the pitch

She Belongs, a girls soccer program bringing together refugee players with their native Utah peers, is starting its second season.

Inside a sporting complex just off of West Temple in South Salt Lake, laughter and the thud of soccer cleats engulf the space.

“Block her, block her!” yelled #SheBelongs head coach Marli Berg. Throughout the hourlong practice, her soccer buddy Knox — her baby boy, just a few months old — was propped on her hip.

It’s been a year and a half since #SheBelongs – a Utah girls soccer team where half of the players are refugees – embarked through three continents to compete against local refugee soccer clubs.

Now, an all-new group of girls are preparing for a similar trip in June, for the organization’s Global Cup in Madrid against other developing #SheBelongs teams from Washington, D.C., India, Germany and Japan.

Practices, usually held on Friday or Saturday, all start the same – technical exercises disguised as icebreakers to get through the “quiet” between the 15-to-18-year-old girls, Berg said.

“Some of them have never played soccer before,” Berg said, noting that the team had just started training in September. These icebreakers, she said, “[push] them a little.”

“Especially if that’s the first thing we do and we’re a little awkward,” said Aroosa Khurram, 16, with a laugh. “It can get us to open up.”

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) A practice session by SheBelongs, a girls soccer program where refugee girls play with local Utahns, in South Salt Lake on Friday, Dec. 20, 2024.

Madyson Fuimaono was the first of her teammates to arrive at a recent Friday evening practice, already wearing her turquoise cleats. It’s her fourth year on a club team, Fuimaono said, adding that she joined #SheBelongs not only to grow her athletic skills but to create “connections.”

“To be able to just come together over a game,” Fuimaono said, “it’s like being able to see [that], in the world, we can just come together with a simple thing like soccer.”

The best part of practice comes in the last half hour, said Berg, where the teens “just play.”

“The minute you put a soccer ball out here, look how much more energy and life came out,” she said, watching from the bleachers as the girls scrimmage.

Berg said her love for soccer began when she was 4, when her parents put her in the sport to burn off her “100 mile per hour” energy. “Nothing’s changed,” Berg said, who splits her time among three soccer teams – Utah Avalanche Soccer Club, SLCC’s Women’s Soccer and Refugee Soccer (#SheBelongs’ parent organization).

“Without a doubt,” Berg said, #SheBelongs has been the highlight of her coaching career.

“Obviously, soccer is my passion. It’s my love,” Berg said, but “seeing their success,” from their first day to their last, has made the experience “just so fun.”

“Let me [be] the minuscule, minuscule part of their path,” said Berg. “Dust on [their] way to success.”

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) A practice session by SheBelongs, a girls soccer program where refugee girls play with local Utahns, in South Salt Lake on Friday, Dec. 20, 2024. From left are Sayah Sherman, Romisha Adhikari, Fatima Amani, Madyson Fuimaono and Mari Rotondi.

‘A second family anywhere I go’

It was a rainy July in Auckland, New Zealand, when the #SheBelongs team huddled at a local park’s soccer field. Still reeling from a match loss in Tokyo, the players listened to Berg as she, through her routine pep talk, cracked jokes.

Aliyah Bugingo, one of the gathered players, said she remembers that moment whenever she looks at her Instagram – a photo that captures her “favorite” game is pinned on her profile.

“I realized in that moment … that I have a second family anywhere I go,” said Bugingo, 18.

Months later, on the field at Taylorsville High for her first high-school soccer practice, she said the atmosphere felt off. Bugingo said she remembered thinking, “this is not my team.”

As a player for the inaugural #SheBelongs team, Bugingo spent two weeks traveling through San Francisco, Australia, Tokyo and Auckland. Before the trip, engagements with media and state officials, including Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, filled her time.

The bond that grew between Bugingo and the 21 other players is one she said she’s not sure she will experience again.

“I always knew that I had a sister on my side of me,” said Bugingo, her “closest” friends made while on the team.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) A practice session by SheBelongs, a girls soccer program where refugee girls play with local Utahns, in South Salt Lake on Friday, Dec. 20, 2024.

For Khurram, who left Pakistan as a refugee and has lived in Utah since 2017, the team signals belonging.

Khurram gestured towards her teammates at a recent December practice, and said, “here, I feel like everyone can get together, no matter their background.”

Those feelings were furthered, she said, at a recent holiday party, where each player brought food from their culture. Khurram said she and her mom brought store-bought samosas, which were an instant hit with everyone.

“It’s just a big family,” she said. “Even though we haven’t known each other for so long.”

Bugingo was a year old when her family left the Democratic Republic of Congo for Ethiopia. When she was 8, she moved to Utah, a place where she didn’t feel “in tune” with her own refugee community.

Joining the #SheBelongs team was the first time, she said, she felt like she didn’t have to change to fit in.

“Going to school, making friends was really hard because I didn’t feel like I belonged in any kind of way — because either my English was not really good, or I didn’t understand their culture,” Bugingo said. “I had to change myself – physically and mentally – to fit the aesthetic of a Utah student.”

Besides wearing the team’s apparel “24/7,” Bugingo said she has sought for others not to “feel the same type of pain.”

“I carry that with me,” said Bugingo of the program’s message. “To make everybody feel [like they] belong.”

A note to readers • To help pay for the #SheBelongs Global Cup, the group is selling 12 prints from Salt Lake Tribune political cartoonist Pat Bagley, featuring an image of education advocate and Nobel Peace Prize recipient Malala Yousafzai. The prints, each signed by Bagley and Yousafzai, can be purchased at the group’s website, shebelongs.org/malala.


Source: Utah News