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Guest Columnist Brian Almon: Making Sense of the 2026 Idaho GOP Primary

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(Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

May 20, 2026 (Cover Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

Making Sense of the 2026 Idaho GOP Primary

By: Brian Almon

Gem State Chronicle Publisher Brian Almon

Results were still coming in Tuesday night as I drove home from the Idaho GOP watch party. Rural counties continued reporting big vote totals, and some races came down to the wire. There are some big takeaways from this primary election, and here are just a few off the top of my head:

  • Idaho is becoming more geographically polarized. The moderate holdouts in the Panhandle went down in defeat, but conservative challengers in the east were still unable to make any gains.
  • Rep. Jordan Redman took heat for donating his own money to the cause, but it might well have turned the tide in the north.
  • The governor’s machine is strong, but not all-powerful. He and his allies were able to save figures like Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen, Rep. Rick Cheatum, and Sen. Jim Guthrie, but were unable to make any headway in Canyon County or the Panhandle.
  • Hard work was rewarded. Good men such as Reps. Cornel Rasor, Kyle Harris, Steve Tanner, and Chris Bruce, each of whom won very close races in 2024, were reelected by large margins yesterday. Each of them put their heads down and worked hard for their constituents over the past two years.
  • Immigration enforcement is probably on the back burner for the next two years. Guthrie and Mickelsen, the chief opponents of immigration reform, held on, while Sen. Glenneda Zuiderveld, who became emblematic of the problem when Big Ag conspired to shut down her family business, lost.
  • The Gang of 8 is now the Gang of 3, while Idaho Freedom Caucus held all its races and is likely set to expand. Is it time to unite as one conservative caucus heading into 2027?
  • It’s time for new blood. I count nine former legislators who tried to make a comeback this year, but only one—Scott Herndon—was successful.

After sleeping on it and doing some analysis this morning, I could probably write ten thousand words covering each of these angles, but I’ll try to break it up into small chunks over the next few days.

For now, let’s just take some of the most contested races one at a time and I’ll share my initial thoughts.

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Sen. Jim Risch cruised to reelection despite three tenacious challengers. This went about as I expected—I surmise that there will always be at least 1/3 of the electorate who will vote against the incumbent in any situation.

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Congressman Russ Fulcher ran far ahead of the rest of Idaho’s congressional delegation. Voters in congressional district 1 fully support his work.

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Congressman Mike Simpson continues to survive. His 63.31% is his highest primary total in six years. He has a lot of passionate opposition, but voters in the second congressional district continue to reward him for bringing home the bacon (or pork, as you will).

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Gov. Brad Little was never in danger of losing this race, but I expected him to hit north of 65%. Hopefully he takes these results as a warning that he is not immortal, and that he still must work within a conservative state. Mark Fitzpatrick’s mark of nearly 29% is impressive considering his truncated campaign and limited fundraising. Janice McGeachin campaigned for nearly a year and raised three times as much but only hit 32.2%.

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I spoke to the once and future state senator Scott Herndon this morning and he said he was confident of victory as soon as he saw early returns only barely favoring Sen. Jim Woodward. Those two have now competed in four of the past five primaries in district 1, each winning two victories. I believe that Herndon was not only one of the most conservative legislators in the 2023-24 sessions, but one of the most effective, and having him back in office is a game changer.

Herndon ran together with Jane Sauter and Rep. Cornel Rasor, which means LD1 has a conservative trifecta for the first time in recent memory. Sauter combined with Spencer Hutchings for just a hair over 50% last time, and this year she was able to overcome Rep. Mark Sauter (no relation). Rep. Cornel Rasor won a slim race against Chuck Lowman in 2024 for an open seat, but voters rewarded his hard work and solid conservatism with a huge victory last night.

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One of the only contested races in Kootenai County was a referendum on whether that region was still conservative, or would it support a proud Biden/Harris fangirl. Early returns showed this race too close for comfort, but Election Day voting gave Rep. Elaine Price a surge and she won comfortably.

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Terrific results out of district 6. Keep in mind that this is one of four districts in Idaho that are contested between Republicans and Democrats, so nothing is certain yet. However, it is great to see Colton Bennett with the victory that was snatched away in 2024 due to a third candidate splitting the vote. I won’t miss Rep. Lori McCann, one of the most liberal members of the House GOP caucus.

I was critical of the way in which Sen. Dan Foreman pulled the rug out from under supporters of the bill to prohibit taxpayer subsidies for teacher’s unions, but there’s no question he has the support of his voters. When it came to choosing between him or McCann, they stuck by him.

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Like Rep. Rasor, Rep. Kyle Harris proved that if you earnestly work hard for your constituents, they will reward you, even in the face of big outside spending. Harris was down in early voting but pulled ahead for a very comfortable victory. Michael Collins benefited from a lot of money from PACs and special interests, but it wasn’t enough to overcome Harris, who won a slim contest for an open seat in 2024.

Rep. Charlie Shepherd continues to maintain support from his voters as well. 70% is a new high-water mark for him.

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District 8 saw wholesale change in 2024, with three moderate lawmakers giving way to three conservatives. Sen. Christy Zito and Rep. Faye Thompson aligned with the Gang of 8 while Rep. Rob Beiswenger joined the Idaho Freedom Caucus. Zito held on against two former legislators but Thompson fell to Brian Beckley, former chair of the Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation, who raised a massive amount of money from both individuals and special interests. (He also registered brianforidaho.com, for what that’s worth.)

Like Rasor and Harris, Beiswenger proved that honest hard work pays off. He carried the nation’s best medical freedom bill to fruition in 2025 and was rewarded with a second term.

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District 9 saw all three incumbents win comfortably, with freshman Sen. Brandon Shippy leading all with a massive 84% of the vote. Gregg Diacogiannis had campaigned since even before the previous primary, and led all challengers, but Rep. Judy Boyle is a southwestern Idaho institution, and was always going to be tough to defeat.

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Sen. Camille Blaylock barely defeated then-incumbent Chris Trakel in 2024, but since then has not only voted fairly conservatively but made a significant connection with Caldwell voters. Over the last two years she’s shown herself to be one of the most naturally gifted politicians I’ve seen in my time in Idaho.

The split between Gang of 8 members Reps. Kent Marmon and Lucas Cayler is striking. They voted very similarly, but have very different personalities. Perhaps there was something about their opponents that affect the race as well—Debbie Geyer clearly struck a chord that Carlos Hernandez did not.

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Nampa loves Sen. Ben Adams. At just under 74% of the vote, this was by far the best primary showing of his career.

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I know I’m starting to sound like a broken record, but Rep. Steve Tanner has again proved that constituents reward those who work for them. Kody Daffer got a big chunk of special interest money and an endorsement from the governor, but still could not clear 40%. Tanner went from a close victory in a three way race in 2024 to a solid reelection victory in 2026.

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Sen. Scott Grow has maintained solid support in district 14 as he has steadily reformed the legislative budget process. The one third anti-incumbent vote was here for Mac Raslan.

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Following his stunning victory over then Senate Pro Tem Chuck Winder in 2024, Sen. Josh Keyser earned two challengers. Though they dragged him under 50%, he still won by nearly 500 votes and will return for a second term.

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One of the closest legislative elections of the night was in south Meridian, where former lawmaker Greg Ferch and machine darling Kelly Walton competed for the open seat vacated by the retiring Rep. John Vander Woude. Ferch ran a great race but fell just short.

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Need I say it again? Like Reps. Rasor, Harris, and Tanner, Rep. Chris Bruce won a very close race in 2024 and then spent two years working diligently for his constituents. They rewarded him with a landslide over Melissa Durrant, who returned for a rematch following that close race two years ago.

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I said before the election that I wouldn’t be surprised by any outcome, but I was wrong. I absolutely did not see Sen. Glenneda Zuiderveld losing, and certainly not by the margin she did. Combine that with Rep. Clint Hostetler holding on for a comfortable victory, and Rep. Steve Miller taking third in his primary, and I just have to admit that district 24 boggles my mind. Hostetler defeated Alexandra Caval, who had previously challenged Zuiderveld in 2024 and lost convincingly. Perhaps, as in Caldwell, it came down to candidate personalities.

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Twin Falls was a tough break for conservatives all around this year. In 2024, the Magic Valley Miracle saw Zuiderveld win reelection, joined by Reps. Hostetler and David Leavitt and Sen. Josh Kohl. Now, three of those four have lost reelection. Does this mean that Twin Falls is ideologically moderate, and 2024 was a fluke? Or is the region still figuring itself out, and could swing rightward again in two years?

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Eastern Idaho was once again a firewall for the governor’s machine, though it took a lot more effort, money, and even a personal visit from Gov. Little himself to carry his people across the line. Sen. Jim Guthrie’s reelection astounds me, as I can’t believe that Republican voters in district 28 support his positions which have become indistinguishable from Boise liberals. Nevertheless, David Worley has proven that these eastern Idaho icons are not invulnerable.

The House race was a rematch from 2024, with both Rep. Rick Cheatum and James Lamborn improving their numbers at the expense of perennial candidate Mike Saville. Lamborn gained on Cheatum, having lost by 480 votes in 2024 but only 235 this year. Disappointing result, but again this shows that conservatives can potentially win in the east.

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Rep. Tanya Burgoyne was a bright spot in Pocatello these past two years, and I’ll miss her in the Legislature. A 40-vote loss is heartbreaking.

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I don’t know if this is better or worse than Julianne Young’s 4-vote loss to Rep. Ben Fuhriman two years ago. I thought she ran a terrific campaign and had a lot of support from conservatives statewide. For some reason, voters decided to send Fuhriman back for another term.

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Karey Hanks’ latest comeback attempt fell short. Rep. Rod Furniss won by less than 300 votes in 2024, but this time he won by more than 1,600. It seemed that Furniss played it fairly quietly the past two sessions—no red flag law attempts, no talk of tampons on the House floor—which certainly didn’t hurt. In the end, institutional power is a tough nut to crack.

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Kelly Golden improved on her 2024 numbers against Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen, turning a 1900-vote margin into a 900-vote span. Both Mickelsen and seatmate Rep. Erin Bingham won by about the same margin, showing again the institutional power of Big Ag and the governor’s machine in eastern Idaho.

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Rep. Barbara Ehardt remains the lone bulwark of how I define conservatism out in eastern Idaho. The machine threw everything it had at her but she prevailed yet again. Ehardt is a very special and unique person, and I’m gratified she will return for another session.

Jilene Burger gained about one hundred votes on Rep. Marco Erickson, but still fell short. Combined with Ehardt’s victory, this shows that there is a demand for a liberty-focused candidate in Idaho Falls.

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Former state representative Chad Christensen’s comeback attempt against appointed freshman Rep. Mike Veile fell short as well.

I’ll continue digesting these results and sharing my thoughts over the coming weeks. Most of last night’s victors will serve as our legislators in 2027, but those in districts 6 and 29 still face tough Democratic opponents in November. That means we won’t know the exact makeup of the Legislature—or what it means for committee assignments and leadership races—until the end of the year.

Earlier this year, I broke down the ideological makeup of the House of Representatives using two floor votes: H704, mandating E-Verify, and HJR7, repealing the Blaine Amendment. I took another look at those numbers in light of yesterday’s results and found that the generally conservative caucus went from 36 members to 35, while the liberal caucus increased from 12 to 14. While this represents a step back from the victories of 2024, we are still in a much stronger position than we were heading into that election just two years ago. I think this shows that Idaho is still trending conservative, but the moderate machine will not give up without a fight.

As always, we will learn as much as we can from these results and keep looking ahead. We must continue working to pass good policy and defeat bad bills during the 2027 and 2028 legislative sessions, while maintaining a long-term view of how our actions today will shape the Idaho our children inherit.

Running a campaign is not easy, and I appreciate every conservative candidate who stepped up to stand for election. Win or lose, our task remains the same: move forward with a positive vision for Idaho’s future.

About Brian Almon

Brian Almon is the Editor of the Gem State Chronicle. He also serves as Chairman of the District 14 Republican Party and is a trustee of the Eagle Public Library Board. He lives with his wife and five children in Eagle.

Editor’s note:  This article originally appeared in the Gem State Chronicle.  I encourage our readers to visit their website and consider subscribing.  Find this and other informative articles at the Gem State Chronicle here: About – Gem State Chronicle

Idaho Hits 250,000 Milestone: Statewide Service Challenge Ignites Spirit of Kindness

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(America250 in Idaho Press Release, May 19, 2026)

BOISE, ID — Idahoans have officially surpassed 250,000 acts of service through the America250 in Idaho Service Challenge and will continue strong leading up to America’s 250th birthday on July 4.

Launched by the America250 in Idaho Ambassadors, the challenge invited Idahoans to serve their communities and log their efforts at IdahoKindness.com. Since January, volunteers of all ages have stepped up through food drives, school projects, veteran support, neighborhood cleanups, handmade donations, and countless acts of kindness across the state.

More than 45 statewide organizations partnered in the effort, alongside JustServe, helping connect volunteers with local needs.

So far, the movement has reached 166 Idaho cities, with Idaho Falls alone contributing almost 100,000 acts of service. Nearly 4,000 acts directly supported veterans and military families through care packages, cemetery flag placements, home projects, thank-you cards, visits to veterans in assisted living facilities, and community outreach.

“To reach 250,000 acts of kindness as we look toward America’s 250th anniversary is more than a celebration—it is a renewal of our promise to one another,” said Jessica Cooper Whiting. “When we look past the numbers, we see a movement that strengthened communities across Idaho and created a legacy of service that will outlast this celebration.”

Adding Idaho’s signature flair to the campaign was the patriotic mascot Martha-Tot Washingtater, inspired by Martha Washington’s Revolutionary War-era commitment to service. Martha-Tot became a statewide symbol of the campaign’s message: that even small acts of kindness can spark something revolutionary.

“This was never just about reaching a number,” said Idaho State Treasurer Julie Ellsworth. “It was about bringing Idahoans together, inspiring future generations, and showing the country what’s possible when kindness becomes a movement.”

Upcoming Regional Celebrations

To honor the volunteers, schools, and organizations driving this movement, regional celebration events will be announced soon across Idaho. Each event will recognize the individuals and communities helping build Idaho’s growing culture of service.

While the 250,000-act milestone has been reached, organizers say the momentum will continue. The America250 in Idaho “Year of Volunteerism” is helping establish a lasting spirit of service that will continue shaping Idaho communities long after America’s 250th birthday has passed.

Domestic Highway Enforcement Team Seizes Large Quantity of Narcotics Following Pursuit near Pocatello

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(ISP Press Release, May 20, 2026)

BINGHAM COUNTY, Idaho – The Idaho State Police Domestic Highway Enforcement (DHE) team seized a large quantity of narcotics following a vehicle pursuit near Pocatello.

Just before midnight on May 18, a DHE trooper patrolling Interstate 86 observed a sedan with California license plates turn northbound onto Interstate 15 without signaling. When the trooper attempted a traffic stop near milepost 74 in Bannock County, the driver failed to yield, prompting a pursuit.

The pursuit continued through a construction zone, where traffic was diverted onto southbound U.S. Highway 91. During the pursuit, the sedan used the right shoulder to pass several semi-trucks, struck a construction sign, and ignored directions from a construction flagging crew. The vehicle continued toward the Fort Hall Indian Reservation, where the Fort Hall Police Department successfully deployed spike strips, bringing the vehicle to a stop.

The driver, a 40-year-old man from Fargo, North Dakota, was arrested without further incident.

Troopers searched the vehicle and located approximately one pound of fentanyl powder, two pounds of methamphetamine, more than two pounds of cocaine, and one-half pound of marijuana.

The driver was booked into the Bingham County Jail on probable cause for trafficking fentanyl, trafficking methamphetamine, trafficking cocaine, felony possession of marijuana, and felony eluding.

“This seizure highlights the value of having a dedicated team focused on disrupting drug trafficking across Idaho,” Lt. Ryan Hoxie said. “Through support of Gov. Little’s Esto Perpetua initiative, DHE proactively targets the criminal organizations bringing dangerous narcotics into our state. These drugs continue to devastate Idaho families and communities, and our troopers work every day to identify traffickers, stop illegal drugs from reaching our communities, and arrest offenders.”

As part of Gov. Brad Little’s Esto Perpetua initiative, ISP’s Domestic Highway Enforcement team is a proactive multijurisdictional narcotics task force made up of 14 troopers, including seven canine handlers, stationed throughout Idaho to combat emerging criminal trends using advanced interdiction techniques, intelligence-driven enforcement, and partnerships with local prosecutors and allied agencies.

Supported through the Oregon-Idaho High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) program, the team works to identify, disrupt, and dismantle local, multistate, and international drug trafficking organizations through coordinated, multiagency enforcement efforts designed to keep Idaho communities safe. Additionally, the team works through an Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) sponsored counterdrug grant program that coordinates with and provides funding for multiagency drug enforcement initiatives, ensuring the effectiveness of operations.

ICCU Splashpad Will Open for the Season Saturday, May 23

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, May 20, 2026; Cover photo credit: City of Pocatello)

Get ready to splash into summer! The Pocatello Parks & Recreation Department is excited to announce that the Idaho Central Credit Union (ICCU) Splashpad at OK Ward Park will officially open for the season Saturday, May 23, 2026. The splashpad will be open daily from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Located next to Brooklyn’s Playground, the ICCU Splashpad offers residents and visitors a fun and refreshing way to beat the summer heat. The colorful, garden-theme splash pad features nearly 3,000 square feet of “wet zone” with water features spraying in every direction. Designed for a variety of ages, the splashpad includes a section for toddlers as well as more dynamic water features for older children.

For more information, please contact Pocatello Parks & Recreation at 208-234-6232.

In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, it is the policy of the City of Pocatello to offer its public programs, services, and meetings in a manner that is readily accessible to everyone, including those with disabilities.  If you are disabled and require an accommodation, please contact Skyler Beebe with two (2) business days’ advance notice at sbeebe@pocatello.gov; 208.234.6248; or 5815 South 5th Avenue, Pocatello, Idaho.  Advance notification within this guideline will enable the City to make reasonable arrangements to ensure accessibility.

Experimental Breeder Reactor-I Atomic Museum Opens Friday, May 22; 75th Anniversary Approaches

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(Idaho National Laboratory Press Release, May 20, 2026; Cover image credit: INL FB)

(IDAHO FALLS, Idaho) – The Experimental Breeder Reactor-I Atomic Museum will open for the 2026 season Friday, May 22. Located 50 miles west of Idaho Falls on U.S. Highway 20, the museum is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Labor Day. Admission is free.

This year’s opening comes as EBR-I approaches a major milestone. This is the 75th anniversary of its historic first generation of usable electricity from nuclear energy on Dec. 20, 1951, at the National Reactor Testing Station, now known as Idaho National Laboratory.

A popular stop for travelers exploring eastern Idaho, EBR-I offers a unique opportunity to explore the world’s first nuclear power plant. The atomic museum provides a hands-on look at a pivotal moment in scientific history, making it an ideal addition to a summer road trip.

“I’m always surprised when I find out local people have never been to EBR-I. I used to take my kids every summer,” said Liza Raley, INL ambassador. “We’d drive out, spend a couple hours pushing buttons at the museum, get some lunch in Arco, and then explore Craters of the Moon and Hell’s Half Acre. It’s such a fun way to learn about INL and fill a summer day.”

The reactor operated until late 1963 and was decommissioned in 1964. It was designated a National Historic Landmark on Aug. 25, 1966, by President Lyndon B. Johnson and Glenn Seaborg, then chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission.

New features and resources

  • America 250 posters featuring the theme “Moments That Made Us” will also be available for visitors during the 2026 season.
  • The museum will offer a penny press this year. Visitors are encouraged to bring loose pennies to create a souvenir keepsake.
  • On June 5, June 19, July 3, July 17, July 31, Aug. 14 and Aug. 28, architectural historian Libby Cook will be on-site from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. to answer questions. Cook will also lead a guided tour each of those days at noon on understanding EBR-I’s evolution and the decisions of the people who built it.
  • Visitors can enrich their EBR-I trip by watching the “I Explored the World’s First Nuclear Power Plant (and How It Works)” episode on the “Smarter Every Day” YouTube channel.
  • Visitors can download the free TravelStorys app and listen to an on-demand tour of INL on their drive across the desert.
  • National Parks Passport holders can also bring their booklet to the museum to collect a stamp.

No reservations are necessary for the available guided and self-guided tours. Send questions to tours@inl.gov or call 208-526-0050.

About Idaho National Laboratory
Battelle Energy Alliance manages INL for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Nuclear Energy. INL is the nation’s center for nuclear energy research and development, and also performs research in each of DOE’s strategic goal areas: energy, national security, science and the environment. For more information, visit www.inl.gov. Follow us on social media: Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and X.

FBI: Scammers Target Older Adult Victims

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(FBI Press Release, May 15, 2026)

During an investigation of a fraudulent call center in India, Special Agent Ron Miller identified a potential American victim in her 70s likely being scammed out of tens of thousands of dollars.

Miller, who is assigned to the Washington Field Office, uncovered the victim’s identity as part of an investigation that included monitoring shipments of bulk cash linked to the Indian-based call center targeting U.S. citizens.

Time is of the essence, so Miller quickly tried to contact the victim. “I knew the financial damage this could cause the victim,” he said.

The victim ignored Miller’s first two calls. She answered his third with suspicion and then hung up and promptly blocked his number. Undeterred, Miller reached the victim on her office phone, and they arranged to meet in person.

Miller eventually convinced her she was being scammed. “The victim just broke down emotionally in disbelief after realizing that she had lost her life savings to a scam,” Miller said.

The financial toll was devastating. The victim had already sent more than $500,000 in cash, wire transfers, and gift cards. She had also pulled out the equity in her once paid-off home.

The emotional impact can be as equally devastating, as scam victims often struggle with embarrassment, anxiety, stress, and depression.

The case is a prime example of how convincing and manipulative these criminals can be. The victim is a distinguished criminology professor with extensive knowledge in victimology.

“Almost anyone can be a victim,” Miller said. “These guys are just that good.”

According to a 2025 report from the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), complaints from victims over 60 exceeded 201,000 and reported losses were more than $7.7 billion. Complaints increased by 37% and losses by 59% compared to 2024.

The average reported loss for older victims was more than $38,000 in 2025, with at least 12,400 victims claiming losses of at least $100,000.

Older citizens are attractive targets for many reasons. First, they tend to have accumulated significant savings throughout their lives. Additionally, older victims may be driven by loneliness to communicate with strangers. And they can be more trusting of people, too, making them more likely to engage with unsolicited phone calls, text messages, and emails.

In phishing and spoofing scams, criminals send these types of unsolicited—but convincing—emails, text messages, and phone calls to request personal, financial, or login credentials.

Last year, more seniors fell victim to phishing/spoofing frauds than any other type, with more than 48,000 complaints—more than 24% of all claims, according to the IC3 report .

But the biggest money drain for seniors in 2025 continued to be investment schemes, with more than $3.5 billion in reported losses last year. Schemes that included cryptocurrency as an element ensnared more than 42,000 older victims, resulting in $4.3 billion in losses.

The professor that Miller uncovered fell victim to a government impersonation scheme, a scam in which someone poses as a government official to defraud a victim.

In 2025, government impersonation schemes generated 32,400 complaints across all age ranges, with reported losses of nearly $798 million. Among senior victims, IC3 logged more than 8,600 complaints about government impersonation scams.

Miller said the scammer claimed to be from the Drug Enforcement Administration and said her name and Social Security number had been linked to financial accounts associated with drug trafficking and money laundering.

The scammer also told the victim there was a warrant for her arrest.

“The best way to avoid scams is to ignore unsolicited communications, especially calls from unknown numbers. The longer scammers talk to victims, the more successful they are with the scam.”– Ron Miller, special agent, Washington Field Office

After the victim pleaded her innocence, Miller said, the scammer told her they did not believe she was guilty of any criminal activities. She was actually the victim of identity theft, they said—her information was likely stolen by the drug cartels they were investigating.

The scammer offered to help her by clearing her name of any criminal activities and protecting her assets from the drug cartel if she agreed to cooperate with the government.

Cooperation included strict secrecy. The victim could not tell anyone, including other law enforcement—like an FBI agent.

The scammer also told the victim that the drug cartels or the government might try to seize her assets. The best thing the victim could do, the scammer said, was to transfer all her money to the government for safekeeping in a “federal locker” or “government vault.”

While rapid reporting to IC3 can sometimes support the recovery of lost funds, “recovering money lost in scams, especially those originating overseas, is challenging and unlikely,” said Miller. “Typically, the money is long gone.”

The victim in Miller’s case can no longer look forward to retirement, Miller said.

“When the victim liquidated all her savings from her bank accounts and brokerage accounts, the scammer instructed the victim to cash out her home equity,” he said.

“They wiped her out of everything.”

Avoiding scams and frauds 

Miller’s case highlights some traditional red flags:

  • the demand for secrecy, which isolated the victim
  • the sense of urgency to protect her assets.
  • the fear of arrest by law enforcement unaware of the victim’s “innocence”
  • a law enforcement agency requesting cash or valuables.

Other scam red flags include:

  • unsolicited emails, phone calls, or texts
  • requests to wire money
  • requests to pay bills or legal fees with retail gift cards
  • offers that are too good to be true

The best way to avoid scams is to ignore unsolicited communications, especially calls from unknown numbers. The longer scammers talk to victims, the more successful they are with the scam, Miller said.

“Just don’t engage,” he said.

Some common scams aimed at older people include:

  • Grandparent scams: Criminals pose as relatives and claim they need money immediately.
  • Tech support: Criminals pose as technology support representatives and offer to fix non-existent computer issues.
  • Romance scams: Criminals develop online romantic relations with lonely seniors.
  • Charity scams: Criminals collect money for fake charities.
  • Contest/lottery scams: Criminals tell victims they have won money and just need to pay some fees to collect.

People who believe they are victims of a scam should contact their banks immediately. They should also file a report at ic3.gov and provide as many details as possible.

Guest Columnist ID Representative David Leavitt: The Humble Watchman

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May 15, 2026

The Humble Watchman
Pride, power, faith, and the struggle to remain human

By: Idaho Dist. 25 Representative David Leavitt

ID State Representative David Leavitt (LD25); Photo Credit: David Leavitt

In an October 1989 General Conference address titled Beware of Pride, Ezra Taft Benson delivered a warning that feels more relevant today than when it was first given.

“Pride is the universal sin, the great vice.”
— Ezra Taft Benson

Most people hear that word and think of arrogance. Vanity. Someone who thinks too highly of themselves. But Benson defined it differently. He described pride not as self-importance but as enmity: hostility toward others, the constant need to elevate ourselves by diminishing someone else.

That definition changes everything.

Pride is no longer just about ego. It becomes comparison. Resentment. The obsession with being right rather than seeking what is right.

“Pride is concerned with who is right. Humility is concerned with what is right.”
—Ezra Taft Benson

Those words strike at something most of us recognize the moment we hear them. Not because they are unfamiliar, but because they describe something we see every single day.

We live in a culture that rewards outrage, vanity, self-promotion, and tribal loyalty. Social media thrives on comparison and humiliation. Politics increasingly feels less like a contest of ideas and more like a machine built to destroy people. Public discourse has drifted away from asking “Is this right?” and toward asking “Did my side win?”

And perhaps the most dangerous part of pride is that it is easiest to see in everyone else and hardest to recognize in ourselves.

Benson warned that civilizations rarely collapse in a single dramatic moment. More often, they decay slowly from within. Pride blinds people. It hardens them. It replaces humility with self-importance and the willingness to be corrected with the need to be justified.

The proud are easily offended. They struggle to receive correction. They seek validation from the world around them. They fear the judgment of their peers more than the judgment of truth.

If we are honest, every one of us recognizes some part of that in ourselves.

Those of us who have served in uniform understand something about tribalism that often gets misread.

Tribalism isn’t inherently a flaw. At its best, it is a foundation. It is loyalty to your unit, your people, your community. It is how soldiers bring each other home. It is how families hold together through hard times and how communities survive when everything around them is uncertain. That kind of tribalism is not something to be ashamed of. It is something to be honored.

But there is another form. And it is worth naming clearly.

It is the tribalism that does not unite people around shared values but instead defines itself entirely by who it excludes. It does not ask “what do we stand for?” It asks “who are we against?” It measures loyalty not by what you are willing to sacrifice but by how willing you are to destroy the people outside the circle.

That form of tribalism is not loyalty. It is pride with a flag wrapped around it.

And politics has become very good at producing it.

Modern politics has become, in many ways, a machine fueled by pride. Public humiliation is celebrated. Anger is monetized. People are rewarded for destroying opponents rather than persuading neighbors. Even movements built on genuine principle can be quietly poisoned when winning becomes more important than being right.

But there is a particular form of pride worth naming because it is the hardest to confront.

It is the pride that wraps itself in religious authority.

It uses the language of faith not as a source of personal conviction but as a political instrument. It identifies enemies — people who vote differently, govern differently, or simply refuse to pass someone else’s test of acceptability — and frames them as threats to God himself. It does not persuade. It accuses. It does not seek truth. It seeks victory, and then calls that victory righteousness.

That kind of pride is especially difficult to challenge, because any challenge to it can be reframed as a challenge to faith itself.

But it is not faith. It is pride wearing faith’s clothing.

And it causes real damage, not just to the people it targets but to the very religious communities it claims to represent. When faith becomes a tool for winning elections, something inside it gets hollowed out. People begin to wonder whether any of it was ever really about God, or whether God was simply useful.

That corruption is not new. It has appeared in every era of American political life. It has appeared in Idaho’s own history, when religious identity was used to exclude entire communities from civic participation — not because those people lacked character or integrity, but because they failed someone else’s definition of acceptable.

The targets change. The mechanism never does.

Real religious freedom, the kind worth defending, cannot function as a gatekeeping tool. It does not sort people into the acceptable and the unacceptable based on whether they share a particular set of beliefs. It does not hand political power to those who pass a religious test and deny it to those who don’t.

It means that people of every faith, and people of no faith, can participate fully and equally in public life. It means that government does not become the instrument of any church. It means that a person’s conscience is their own — sacred, private, and answerable to God alone, not to whoever is running the most well-funded political operation in the valley.

That is not a new idea. It is a foundational one. And it is currently under pressure from people who are entirely sincere in believing they are doing what is right.

Sincerity is not the same as humility. It is not the same as truth.

Benson’s warning was never directed only at the wicked. It was directed at everyone — especially at those who had convinced themselves that their righteousness placed them beyond the need for correction.

He offered an antidote. Not a complicated one.

“We can choose to be humble.”
—Ezra Taft Benson

Not compelled. Not forced. Chosen.

Humility is not weakness. It is the ability to place truth above ego. To admit fault. To learn. To hold conviction without using it as a weapon against the people around you.

In a world that rewards self-exaltation and punishes vulnerability, that kind of humility has become almost countercultural.

Maybe that is exactly why the warning matters now more than ever.

Civilizations rarely collapse in a single dramatic moment. More often, they decay slowly, quietly, from within. Pride erodes families, communities, churches, friendships, and nations. It convinces people they no longer need correction, no longer need forgiveness, no longer need one another.

The choice Benson described — to be humble, to place what is right above who is right — may matter more to the future of this state and this country than any election, any institution, or any political movement ever will.

That choice belongs to each of us.

Guest Columnist Rep. Heather Scott: Black Plates, White Plates…and a Bigger Question

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May 18, 2026

Black Plates, White Plates…and a Bigger Question

By: Idaho Representative Heather Scott

Across Idaho, black-and-white license plates, often referred to as “blackout plates,” are becoming increasingly popular. Many people simply see them as a stylish vintage trend as they look clean, sharp, and modern. But there may be another side to the story that Idahoans should be aware of.

Black-and-white plates also happen to be easier for automated cameras and license plate reader systems to scan and track. The high contrast between white letters and dark backgrounds allows infrared cameras and optical recognition systems to identify vehicles faster and more accurately, especially at night.

License plate reader technology is expanding rapidly across America, including here in Idaho. These systems can automatically log where vehicles travel, when they pass certain intersections, and how often they appear in different locations. Modern systems don’t just read plate numbers anymore, many can also identify vehicle make, model, color, travel patterns, and see into your car!

Idaho is not unique in the blackout plate fad. There are currently 11 states now offering blackout plates. (California, Iowa, Colorado, Mississippi, Utah, Indiana, North Dakota, Kansas, Michigan, Montana, and Wisconsin.)

To be clear, most people choosing these plates are not thinking about surveillance. They simply like the look. But government and private tracking systems are growing quietly in the background while the public is distracted by convenience and aesthetics.

This is how freedom is often reduced in the modern world. Not all at once, but one small “reasonable” step at a time.

We now live in an era of:

  • Traffic cameras and automatic toll systems
  • Facial recognition
  • Cell phone location tracking
  • Digital IDs
  • AI-powered surveillance systems
  • Vehicle data collection
  • Smart devices constantly gathering information
  • Cellular trail cameras

Individually, each system may seem harmless but stitched together, they create a daily, if not hourly, pattern of individual movements. This is something previous generations of Americans would have deeply questioned: the ability to monitor citizens continuously without warrants, suspicion, or probable cause.

Technology itself is not the enemy. Public safety matters and criminals should be caught. But free people need to always be asking:

Who is collecting the data?
Why are they collecting the data?
How long is it stored?
Who has access to it?
Can it be abused politically or commercially?
What protections exist for innocent citizens?

History shows us that governments rarely give up surveillance powers once they gain them.

Idahoans value independence, privacy, and freedom from unnecessary government intrusion. That means we should think carefully before blindly embracing technologies that make mass tracking easier, even when they arrive disguised as convenience, safety, or “cool new trends.”

Sometimes the biggest threats to liberty don’t arrive with alarms and flashing lights.

Sometimes they arrive in matte black with white lettering. Should you be scared? Not yet. Should you be aware and vigilant? Absolutely.

In Liberty,

Rep. Heather Scott

Jefferspud Writing Contest Winners Announced

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(America 250 in Idaho Press Release, May 15, 2026)

BOISE, ID – The America250 in Idaho Ambassadors are pleased to announce the winners of the Jefferspud Writing Contest. The writing challenge encouraged students age 12-18 to submit original essays focusing on a revolutionary figure who was instrumental in the nation’s founding.

Winners were awarded $250 for first place, $50 for second place, and $25 for third place in a contribution to an IDeal, Idaho Education Savings Plan account.

Winners were:

Age 12-14

  • First Place – Kohara Nomura, Moscow, ID
  • Second Place – Tanner Fowler, Idaho Falls, ID
  • Third Place – Claire Danes, Challis, ID

Age 15-18

  • First Place – Audrey Stebbins, Twin Falls, ID
  • Second Place – Bianca Breda, American Falls, ID
  • Third Place – Landon Kemp, Meridian, ID

The contest was sponsored by Eagle River Publishing and IDeal – Idaho’s Education Savings Program. An E-book containing all 21 entries will be published this summer and available on Amazon.

Justice Department Announces Results of Operation Iron Pursuit

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(U.S. Attorney’s Office Press Release, May 5, 2026)

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah — The Department of Justice today announced the results of Operation Iron Pursuit, a one-month, nationwide enforcement effort to find child victims of sex abuse and arrest child sex predators. More than 200 child victims were located and over 350 child sexual abuse offenders were arrested. All 56 FBI field offices and U.S. Attorneys’ offices around the country participated in the coordinated takedown effort.

The operation commenced April 1 and ended April 30. The Administration for Children and Families recognizes April as National Child Abuse Prevention Month.

“This operation puts every child predator on notice: we are coming for you,” said Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. “The sexual exploitation of minors is an abomination with no place in our society. We will hunt down these offenders, hold them fully accountable under the law, and deliver justice for victims.”

“Every single day this FBI is working 24/7 to break networks of child abusers all across this country,” said FBI Director Kash Patel. “Last year we joined our partners delivering a record year, identifying and rescuing over 6,300 missing children, and today’s announcement of Operation Iron Pursuit is just the latest success in that work — with over 200 victims located and over 350 offenders arrested. Let this be a message to criminal actors who seek to target America’s children: you will be pursued, and you will be brought to justice.”

“There is no greater priority in the District of Utah than protecting and pursuing justice for our children,” said First Assistant U.S. Attorney Melissa Holyoak of the District of Utah. “As with this administration, the U.S. Attorney’s Office will continue vigorously to combat crimes against children and hold offenders accountable.”

“Every child matters and deserves the opportunity to grow up free from harm,” said Special Agent in Charge Robert Bohls of the Salt Lake City FBI. “The FBI and our partners will continue working tirelessly to stop those who prey on our most vulnerable and hold them accountable.”

Victims recovered include a 10-year-old from Utah who was flown from Cuba to home and the child’s biological mother. The child was supposed to be on a camping trip with a transgender parent, partner, and another child. The group instead flew from Canada to Mexico and then to Cuba; concerns existed that the 10-year-old child was taken to Cuba for gender reassignment surgery. FBI Victim Services Division (VSD) assisted with the recovery of the children, providing crisis support and stabilization.

Those arrested are alleged to have committed various crimes, including sexual exploitation, sex trafficking, abuse, kidnapping, and possessing, distributing, or receiving child sexual abuse materials (CSAM). Some of the alleged offenders include:

  • A Columbus, Ohio, man who pleaded guilty to creating AI-generated obscene material of adults and children and to cyberstalking exes;
  • A District of Columbia man charged with producing child pornography;
  • A New York man charged with sexually exploiting a child; and
  • A Pennsylvania man and former felon charged with sexually exploiting a child and illegally possessing a gun.

This effort follows three other successful operations last year. Operation Relentless Justice, concluded in December 2025, resulted in the rescue of 205 children and arrests of 293 offenders. Operation Enduring Justice, concluded in August 2025, resulted in the rescue of 133 children and the arrests of 234 offenders. And Operation Restore Justice, concluded in May 2025, resulted in the rescue of 115 children and the arrests of 205 child sex abuse offenders.

The FBI’s VSD assisted victims during Operation Iron Pursuit and provided services such as forensic interviews, referrals for medical and mental health resources, and coordination with partners. VSD’s mission is to inform, support, and assist victims in navigating the aftermath of crime and the criminal justice process with dignity and resilience.

The Department partners with and oversees funding grants for the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), which receives and shares tips about possible child sexual exploitation received through its 24/7 hotline at 1-800-THE-LOST and on missingkids.org.

The Department urges the public to remain vigilant and report suspected exploitation of a child through the FBI’s tipline at 1-800-CALL-FBI (225-5324), tips.fbi.gov, or by calling your local FBI field office.

An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.