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FIRST ON KHQ: Former Spokane Police Officer Tim Moses Sentenced For Making Misleading Statements Following The Controversial Death Of Otto Zehm

FIRST ON KHQ: Former Spokane Police Officer Tim Moses Sentenced For Making Misleading Statements Following The Controversial Death Of Otto Zehm
SPOKANE, Wash. - In an emotional arraignment and sentencing hearing now former Spokane Police Officer  Tim Moses pleaded guilty and was sentenced for making false or misleading statements to a public servant in the death investigation of Otto Zehm in 2006. The judge sentenced Moses to 12

FIRST ON KHQ: Former Spokane Police Officer Tim Moses Sentenced For Making Misleading Statements Following The Controversial Death Of Otto Zehm

FIRST ON KHQ: Former Spokane Police Officer Tim Moses Sentenced For Making Misleading Statements Following The Controversial Death Of Otto Zehm
SPOKANE, Wash. - In an emotional arraignment and sentencing hearing now former Spokane Police Officer  Tim Moses pleaded guilty and was sentenced for making false or misleading statements to a public servant in the death investigation of Otto Zehm in 2006. The judge sentenced Moses to 12

Gun control forces struggle to keep issue alive

Gun control forces struggle to keep issue alive
By ALAN FRAMAssociated Press WASHINGTON (AP) - Gun control forces are targeting Sens. Kelly Ayotte, Max Baucus and others as they struggle to persuade five senators to switch their votes and revive the rejected effort to expand background checks to more firearms buyers. With Congress back from a

Biden asks clergy to make moral argument on guns

Biden asks clergy to make moral argument on guns
By JOSH LEDERMANAssociated Press WASHINGTON (AP) - Vice President Joe Biden wants pastors, rabbis and nuns to tell their flocks that enacting gun control is the moral thing to do. But another vote may have to wait until Congress wraps up work on an immigration overhaul. Biden met for two-and-a-half

Biden asks clergy to make moral argument on guns

Biden asks clergy to make moral argument on guns
By JOSH LEDERMANAssociated Press WASHINGTON (AP) - Vice President Joe Biden wants pastors, rabbis and nuns to tell their flocks that enacting gun control is the moral thing to do. But another vote may have to wait until Congress wraps up work on an immigration overhaul. Biden met for two-and-a-half

Tiger, mountain lions seized from Kansas property

Tiger, mountain lions seized from Kansas property
By HEATHER HOLLINGSWORTHAssociated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A tiger and two mountain lions were among a menagerie of wild cats seized from private farmland in rural northeast Kansas, where they lived in inadequate chain-link enclosures and weren't properly fed or watered,

Court: Calif. cities can ban medical pot shops

Court: Calif. cities can ban medical pot shops
By LISA LEFFAssociated Press SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The California Supreme Court ruled Monday that cities and counties can ban medical marijuana dispensaries, a decision likely to further diminish the network of storefront pot shops and fuel efforts to have the state regulate the industry. In a

New efforts to curb cellphone theft

New efforts to curb cellphone theft
By TERRY COLLINSAssociated Press SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Disturbed by the nationwide epidemic of cellphone robberies and thefts, law enforcement officials across the country are looking to the wireless industry to help find a cure. In San Francisco, where half the robberies were phone-related last

New efforts to curb cellphone theft

New efforts to curb cellphone theft
By TERRY COLLINSAssociated Press SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Disturbed by the nationwide epidemic of cellphone robberies and thefts, law enforcement officials across the country are looking to the wireless industry to help find a cure. In San Francisco, where half the robberies were phone-related last

New efforts to curb cellphone theft

New efforts to curb cellphone theft
By TERRY COLLINSAssociated Press SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Disturbed by the nationwide epidemic of cellphone robberies and thefts, law enforcement officials across the country are looking to the wireless industry to help find a cure. In San Francisco, where half the robberies were phone-related last