Girl who went missing at 13 years old in 1994 is found alive

A 13-year-old Arizona girl who disappeared nearly 32 years ago has been found alive, the Gila County Sheriff's Office said Wednesday.

NBC Universal

The disappearance of Christina Marie Plante from Star Valley, a small community in a mountainous area northeast of Phoenix, in 1994 sparked an extensive search that included volunteers, the sheriff's office said.

Although the case went cold, it was never closed, and it was periodically re-reviewed, the sheriff's office said. It was assigned to a cold case unit after the unit was formed.

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"Utilizing advances in technology, modern investigative techniques, and detailed case review, detectives developed new leads that ultimately led to a breakthrough," the sheriff's office said in a statement.

The sheriff's office said that out of respect for Plante's privacy, additional details were not being released Wednesday.

When she disappeared on May 16, 1994, she was reported to have last been seen going on foot to a stable where her horse was kept, the sheriff's office said in a missing person poster.

Girl who went missing at 13 years old in 1994 is found alive

A 13-year-old Arizona girl who disappeared nearly 32 years ago has been found alive, the Gila County Sheriff's Office...
NASA's moon mission has begun — here's what's ahead for the Artemis II astronauts

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA's first crewed moon mission in more than 50 years is underway.

NBC Universal

NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Christina Koch and Victor Glover and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansenlaunched Wednesday evening on a 10-day journeyto circle Earth and the moon.

"After a brief, 54-year intermission, NASA is back in the business of sending astronauts to the moon," NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said Wednesday at a post-launch news briefing.

The launch of the Artemis II mission was the first time thatNASA's Space Launch System rocketand Orion spacecraft carried human passengers into orbit.

Image: BESTPIX - Artemis II Launches Manned Test Flight Around The Moon (Joe Raedle / Getty Images)

The flight is intended as a step toward a planned moon landing in 2028.

An estimated 250,000 space fans flocked to central Florida to see the Artemis II mission lift off. Though a few minor issues cropped up during the countdown, they were resolved quickly, and the rocket made a stunning ascent through cloudless skies.

Now that the astronauts have reached space, they will have little downtime. For their first 8½ hours in orbit, the crew is tasked with testing out the Orion capsule's various systems, including the potable water dispenser, the toilet and the air quality control system.

Another crucial test is to practice a docking procedure using the Space Launch System's upper stage as a target. The technology demonstration will be crucial for future Artemis missions, during which astronauts will need to dock with a commercially built lunar lander before they travel down to the moon's surface.

On Thursday, NASA will prepare for a major engine burn to send the Orion capsule toward the moon. Called the trans-lunar injection burn (TLI), the crucial maneuver is scheduled to take place roughly 24 hours into the mission. Flight controllers will meet earlier in the day to decide whether to proceed with the burn, which would put the astronauts on an irreversible path around the moon.

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"We're looking to make sure that the life-support systems work, the vehicle's healthy," Norm Knight, director of NASA's Flight Operations Directorate, said after the launch. "Once we commit to TLI, they have to function."

Image: SPACE-ARTEMIS-NASA (Keegan Barber / NASA)

If all goes according to plan, theArtemis II astronautswill spend the following three days journeying to the moon.

Their next major milestone will come Monday, when they are scheduled to fly around the moon. When they do, they could venture farther from Earth than any humans have before, surpassing the distance record of 248,655 miles set by the Apollo 13 astronauts in 1970.

Over the course of the flyby, the Artemis II astronauts will come within 4,000 to 6,000 miles of the moon's surface,according to NASA. From that vantage point, the moon should appear about the size of a basketball held at arm's length.

As the astronauts swing around the moon, they will become the first to see parts of the lunar surface with human eyes. That is because the far side of the moon always faces away from Earth.

After the flyby, the astronauts will spend the final few days of the mission traveling back to Earth. They are scheduled to splash down in the Pacific Ocean off San Diego on April 10.

Artemis II is a key part of NASA's efforts to return astronauts to the moon and establish a long-term presence on the lunar surface. The agency eventually hopes to build a base on the moon.

Image: Artemis II Launches Manned Test Flight Around The Moon (Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)

Next year, NASA aims to launch the Artemis III mission, which will conduct technology demonstrations in low-Earth orbit with the commercially built moon landers. SpaceX and Blue Origin are developing landers to carry NASA astronauts from lunar orbit down to the moon's surface, so the mission could test one or both.

Then, NASA aims to launch the Artemis IV mission sometime in 2028 to land on the moon.

NASA's moon mission has begun — here's what's ahead for the Artemis II astronauts

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA's first crewed moon mission in more than 50 years is underway. NASA astronauts ...
Two Winter Storms Will Bring Snow, Ice To Northern US As April Kicks Off

A pair of winter storms will blanket parts of the northern U.S. with snow and ice through Saturday from the northern Rockies to the Great Lakes and parts of northern New England as a reminder that April can still deliver wintry weather for some.

The Weather Channel

Fortunately, neither of these back-to-back systems will come anywhere close to the ferocity oflast month's record-setting blizzard. But each will still have impacts on travel into the Easter holiday weekend.

The storms have been named Winter Storm Joseline and Winter Storm Kadence by The Weather Channel.

(MORE:March Had Everything But The Kitchen Sink)

Happening Now

The map below shows where areas of snow, sleet and freezing rain are occurring right now from the northern Rockies into the Great Lakes.

Winter Alerts

Winter storm warnings, and even an ice storm warning, have been issued for parts of the upper Midwest just hammered by last month's blizzard, including parts of Minnesota into northern Wisconsin and Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Conditions in these areas will make it dangerous to travel.

Forecast Timeline

This is when the first winter storm — Joseline — kicks into gear.

A broad swath of snow, sleet and freezing rain is expected from parts of the Dakotas to Minnesota, northern and central Wisconsin and northern Michigan.

Severe thunderstorms are expected from eastern Iowa to southern Michigan by late Thursday. For the forecast on this threat,click here.

By Friday, the first winter storm will have spread most of its snowy, icy mess into eastern Canada. However, some snow, sleet or freezing rain is expected in parts of northern Maine and northern New Hampshire early, before precipitation could change over to rain.

Meanwhile, the second winter storm will take shape over the Northern Plains with more snow and ice. Friday night, that wintry mess will once again spread into the northern Great Lakes.

Winter Storm Kadence will persist in the northern Great Lakes with snow and some areas of ice, though some warmer air could change some areas of freezing rain to rain.

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Some freezing rain could once again also spread into parts of far northern New England Saturday night, but it may change to rain by Easter Sunday.

How Much Snow, Ice?

As we alluded to earlier, despite being two storms back-to-back, the sum of those won't produce anywhere near the totals of the blizzard in mid-March.

However, we do expect a swath of 6-inch-plus snowfall across parts of the Dakotas into northern Minnesota, far northwest Wisconsin and perhaps the western Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Far northern Maine could see snowfall approach 6 inches, as well.

This could make travel difficult on stretches of Interstates 94, 29, 35 and 90. Leave yourself extra time and be prepared in case any stretches of roads close for a period of time. The combination of wet snow and winds may also lead to some power outages and tree damage in some areas.

The map below shows areas that may see enough ice accumulation to make most roads slippery, for a time, particularly bridges and overpasses.

The combination of accumulating ice and winds may also lead to some tree damage and power outages in these areas.

What complicates this forecast, however, is that precipitation in the southernmost areas below may eventually change to rain, and ground temperatures are warmer due to the recent bout of spring warmth.

For now, the highest concern for accumulating ice in the Great Lakes is Thursday, then again early Saturday.

In far northern New England, that icing concern is early Friday, then possibly again early Sunday.

April Snow

You might be wondering how weird snow as late as April is.

The short answer is, "it's typical."

As you can see in the map below, the season's last snow typically happens in April across most of the northern tier, from northern New England to the Northern Plains.

In parts of Michigan's Upper Peninsula and the Rockies, snow usually still falls in May.

Data: NOAA/NWS

Jonathan Erdman is a senior meteorologist at weather.com and has been covering national and international weather since 1996. Extreme and bizarre weather are his favorite topics. Reach out to him onBluesky,X (formerly Twitter)andFacebook.

Two Winter Storms Will Bring Snow, Ice To Northern US As April Kicks Off

A pair of winter storms will blanket parts of the northern U.S. with snow and ice through Saturday from the northern Rock...
What is Good Friday? What to know about holy day ahead of Easter.

One of the most somber days of the Christian calendar has arrived:Good Friday.

USA TODAY

The holy day,which takes place a couple of days before Easter, commemorates Jesus Christ's sacrifice, more specifically the suffering and agony he faced leading up to his Crucifixion.

Good Fridayis a day for "sorrow, penance, and fasting," according toBritannica.

It is one of several Christian celebrations that pay homage to the events leading up to the Crucifixion and Christ's miraculous resurrection on Easter Sunday. The time period is known as Holy Week.

"Good Friday has been, for centuries now, the heart of the Christian message because it is through the death of Jesus Christ that Christians believe that we have been forgiven of our sins," Daniel Alvarez, an associate teaching professor of religious studies at Florida International University,previously told USA TODAY.

Here's what to know about Good Friday, including what date it falls on in 2026.

What is Good Friday? And when is it this year?

Good Friday commemorates "Jesus' trial before Pontius Pilate, his sentence of death, his torture, and his crucifixion and burial," according to theUniversity of Melbourne's Trinity College. The second-to-last day of Holy Week falls on Friday, April 3, this year.

Good Friday, for many Christians, is a "day of fasting, with the faithful attending a church service where they will meditate on and venerate the cross of Christ," Trinity College explains.

The Rev. Dustin Dought, executive director of the Secretariat of Divine Worship for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, previously told USA TODAY that fasting is "a way of emptying ourselves so that we can be filled with God."

Members of the Santa Maria de la Montana Catholic Church in Ciudad Juárez reenact "The Way of the Cross" in an annual procession designed to honor Jesus' final walk to the Cavalry.

Catholics generally abstain from all forms of meat (sans fish) for Lent, a 40-day period, in the time leading up to Holy Week, including Good Friday.

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The Good Friday tradition is designed to honor the way Christ sacrificed his flesh.

Are Good Friday and Passover related?

Alvarez previously told USA TODAY that there was a "direction connection" between Good Friday andPassover, one of the most widely celebrated Jewish holidays.

"The whole Christian idea of atoning for sin, that Jesus is our atonement, is strictly derived from the Jewish Passover tradition," Alvarez said.

While Good Friday commemorates Christ's sacrifice and Passover celebrates the day the "Angel of Death" passed over the homes of Israelites, the "blood of the lamb" is a symbol and theme present in both stories.

In the Christian faith, Jesus is referred to as the "Lamb of God" and is believed to be the "Son of God."

According to Alvarez, the stories of the exodus and the crucifixion not only further tie the stories together but also emphasize how powerful sacrifice, specifically of a firstborn child, and bloodshed are in religion.

"Jesus is the firstborn, so the whole idea of the death of the firstborn is crucial," Alvarez said.

The sacrifice itself is important because it is believed to unleash "tremendous power that is able to fend off any kind of force, including the wrath of God," Alvarez said. Humanity is protected from the "wrath of a righteous God that cannot tolerate sin" because of Jesus' sacrifice.

Contributing: Jordan Mendoza and Julie Gomez, USA TODAY

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:What is Good Friday? What to know about holy day.

What is Good Friday? What to know about holy day ahead of Easter.

One of the most somber days of the Christian calendar has arrived:Good Friday. The holy day,which takes place a...
International groups warn of 'spiral of violence' against journalists in Serbia

BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — International media organizations have joined Serbian journalists in raising the alarm about worsening press freedoms in theBalkan country, including "record levels" of physical violence, online smear campaigns and death threats against reporters.

Associated Press Serbian journalists block the traffic outside the offices of Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in protest of mounting attacks and pressure on the media. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic) Serbian journalists block the traffic outside the offices of Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in protest of mounting attacks and pressure on the media. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic) Serbian journalists block the traffic outside the offices of Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in protest of mounting attacks and pressure on the media. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

Serbia Tensions Media

The partner organizations of the Council of Europe's Platform for the Safety of Journalists and the Media Freedom Rapid Response groups said in a statement released this week that "the past year had seen a continued deterioration, leaving the country in a prolonged and worsening press freedom crisis."

The statement warned that "chances of further escalation in the severity of attacks against journalists remain dangerously high."

A delegation visited Serbiaon March 26-27, holding meetings with both the media and government representatives.

"The mission came at a time of unprecedented physical attacks on journalists and rampant online smear campaigns, led or amplified by influential members of the ruling party," the statement said. "The delegation is fearful that journalists are caught in a spiral of violence with few protections in place."

There was no immediate response from the government's information ministry to a request for comment for The Associated Press.

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Dozens of Serbian journalistson Wednesday blocked traffic outside the office of Serbia's populistPresident Aleksandar Vucicto protest the latest spate of attacks recorded during violence-marred local elections on Sunday.

The Independent Journalists' Association of Serbia said that 20 reporters were attacked on Sunday, while around 100 attacks have been recorded so far this year.

International election observersat the balloting said they witnessed violence and irregularities. The vote was held in 10 municipalities throughout Serbia. It was seen as a test for Vucic after more than a year of youth-led protests that first erupted aftera train station tragedyin Nov. 2024 that killed 16 people.

While he formally seeks EU membership for Serbia, the increasingly authoritarian Vucic and his government have been accused by rights groups ofclamping down on democracy, including media freedoms.

International media groups said in their statement that pressure and attacks on media workers surged since the station canopy collapse in Novi Sad and the start of the student-ledmass demonstrations. The group cited "alarming levels of impunity" with hardly any of the perpetrators being held accountable.

"Clear political will is needed to break the downward spiral and ensure all attacks on the media are properly sanctioned under the law," the statement said.

International groups warn of 'spiral of violence' against journalists in Serbia

BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — International media organizations have joined Serbian journalists in raising the alarm about wors...
Hummingbird migration map reveals new locations across US

Hummingbirdsare beginning toappear farther northas the fast‑winged birds continue their annual spring migration.

USA TODAY

Sightings have been reported across the Gulf Coast in recent weeks, and as far north as New Jersey, where a male ruby‑throated hummingbird was spotted March 31, according to Hummingbird Central'sinteractive migration map. Another hummingbird was seen near Charlotte, North Carolina, on March 22,AccuWeatherreported.

Forecasters sayhummingbirds will continue moving northas temperatures rise, becoming more common across central and eastern states by May.

It is unclear exactly what causeshummingbirds to migrateduring this period, but experts believe longer daylight hours, as well as the abundance of flowers, nectar and insects prompt the birds' northward journey according to Hummingbird Central.

The birding site notes that hummingbirds migrate alone, often following familiar paths, and can travel up to 500 miles at a time at speeds of 20 to 30 mph.

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Here's where hummingbirds have been spotted so far this year and how to attract them to your garden.

A ruby-throated hummingbird (Polistes rubiginosis) near a feeder in Anderson, S.C.

See hummingbird migration map

Hummingbird Central tracks hummingbirds across the country and has published aninteractive hummingbird migration mapfor 2026. The map is updated as of March 31.

A wood storks soars over the Corkscrew Swamp area on Dec. 4, 2024. A couple of wood storks on a sunny afternoon at Ballard Park in Melbourne, Florida A wood stork feeds in a waterway at Hibiscus Golf Club in Naples on Monday, Oct. 6, 2025. Wood storks, great egrets and other birds congregate in a drying marsh off of Corkscrew Road on Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025. Wood storks are seen feeding on fish stranded by rapidly dropping water levels at Paynes Prairie State Preserve near Gainesville, Florida, surrounded by marsh marigolds. Wood stork chicks are seen in the nest on a protected island in the Indian River Lagoon near Sewall's Point, Florida in April 2023, during a bird count by Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologists. A wood stork nestling squawks in its nest at the Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida on April 9, 2021. The baby birds create quite a racket while nesting, compared to their normally silent parents. Two juvenile wood storks sport still yellow beaks at the Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida in May 2025.. Wood storks at the Wakodahatchee Wetlands just west of Delray Beach in May 2023. Young wood storks at the Wakodahatchee Wetlands just west of Delray Beach in May 2023. A wood stork lands on a nest on Lake Somerset, in Lakeland, Florida on Feb. 22, 2013. A wood stork hangs out in a waterway at Bunche Beach in Lee County on Nov. 13, 2023. A wood stork forages at the Celery Fields, a stop on the Great Florida Birding Trail, in Sarasota, Florida on Nov. 15, 2012 on Thursday. A wood stork forages in shallow water in a rare Wisconsin sighting on Aug. 11, 2025 at Mud Lake State Wildlife Area near Watertown. A wood stork glides as the sun sets over Florida's Tomoka Basin near Ormond Beach.

Wood storks look distinctively prehistoric among wetland birds

How to invite hummingbirds to your yard

With impossibly fast wings, small bodies and long distances to travel, hummingbirds must eat every 10 to 15 minutes and visit 1,000 to 2,000 flowers per day, according to theNational Audubon Society.

If you want to boost your chances of seeing a hummingbird in your own backyard, the National Audubon Society says flowers, perches, insects and water are key. Here's what the organization suggests:

  • Flowers: Plant native, flowering plants in your yard. Red or orange tubular flowers attract hummingbirds, as do natives like honeysuckle, bee balm and hummingbird sage, which are rich with nectar.

  • Perches: Give them somewhere to rest, both open and somewhat sheltered.

  • Insects: Hummingbirds also get protein from small insects. Avoid pesticides in the yard, plant insect-pollinated plants in addition to hummingbird-pollinated plants and try hanging overripe fruit near a hummingbird feeder to attract fruit flies.

  • Bathtime: Hummingbirds like to bathe. Giving them fine, fresh water to do so could help attract them. Consider a misting device or a drop fountain.

  • Feeders: Hummingbird feeders also help give hummingbirds nectar, the necessary fuel for their long migrations.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Hummingbird migration map and where to spot them this spring

Hummingbird migration map reveals new locations across US

Hummingbirdsare beginning toappear farther northas the fast‑winged birds continue their annual spring migration. ...
Activist vessel collides with krill trawler in Antarctic confrontation

MIAMI (AP) — A ship operated by a group founded by anti-whaling activist Paul Watson collided with an industrial krill trawler in Antarctica in what the ship's Norwegian owner said was a "deliberate attack" that endangered its crew and could've caused a disaster in the same environmentally sensitive waters the activists claim they want to protect.

Associated Press CORRECTS DATE TO TUESDAY, MARCH 31, NOT APRIL 1 - In this image from video provided by the Aker Qrill Company, an activist ship, operated by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, collides with the Antarctic Sea, a vessel operated by Aker Qrill Company, in Antarctic waters, on Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (Aker Qrill Company via AP) In this photo provided by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, the M/V Bandero, a Captain Paul Watson Foundation vessel, collides with the Antarctic Sea, a vessel operated by Aker Qrill Company, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Antarctica. (Soizic Roux/Captain Paul Watson Foundation via AP)

CORRECTION Antarctica Krill Ship Collision

A two-minute video provided to The Associated Press by the Aker QRILL Co. shows the moment Tuesday when the M/V Bandero, operated by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, slowly steams toward the stern of the fishing vessel, hitting its port side at a slight angle.

The collision underscores thegrowing battlein the frigid waters of the Southern Ocean over the future of Antarctic krill, a shrimplike crustacean central to the diet of whales and critical buffer to global warming that's also in demand for use in health supplements, fishmeal and other products.

Aker said Wednesday that the Bandero came within centimeters of striking a diesel tank on its vessel, the Norwegian-flagged Antarctic Sea, and put at risk a habitat teeming with multiple whale species, seals and seabirds — all feeding on the Southern Ocean'sabundant but environmentally sensitive krill population.

The company said its multinational crew was shaken but unharmed and it would pursue all available legal action.

"Our crew were put at risk in some of the most remote waters on Earth, and only luck avoided potential environmental damage," Aker CEO Webjørn Barstad said in a statement.

The Captain Paul Watson Foundation did not respond to a request from the AP about Aker's accusations. But in its own news release, it characterized its actions as "aggressive nonviolence." It said the crew, led by French activist Lamya Essemlali, managed to disrupt all krill fishing during a five-hour "direct intervention" against two Aker-owned vessels. It also provided images showing the crew launching giant metal net shredding devices intended to disrupt fishing.

Watson himself was not on the ship, which departed Australia in February as part of what the Watson foundation called Operation Krill Wars.

"Throughout the encounter, the crew witnessed Antarctic wildlife in the surrounding waters, including penguins, seals, and even a whale, underscoring what was at stake as a small ship challenged a powerful industrial krill operation in a stark David-and-Goliath scenario," the foundation said in a statement.

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Watson founded the global Sea Shepherd conservation movement in the 1970s and for decades won a fearsome reputation for ramming vessels and other aggressive tactics in confrontations on the high seas that repeatedly landed him in jail. He was lastdetained in Greenland for five monthsin 2024 on a Japanese warrant that was later rejected by Denmark. Japan's coast guard sought his arrest over an encounter in 2010 in which he was accused of ordering a captain of his ship to throw explosives at what the Japanese labeled a whaling research ship.

While the Canadian-American citizen in the past has drawn support from Hollywood celebrities, his hard-line tactics have split the movement he started, with affiliates in France and Brazil rallying behind his newly created namesake foundation while Sea Shepherd Global and 20 national affiliates focus more on watchdog patrols on the high seas, policy action and supporting law enforcement in poorer countries where illegal fishing is rampant.

Fishing in Antarctica for krillsurged to a record last season, forcing an early closure of fishing activity for the first time.

Aker is the world's largest harvester of krill, responsible for over half the world's catch.

The remote fishery is managed by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources, an international organization composed of 27 nations and the European Union.

Any investigation into the incident, including possible criminal prosecution, is likely to commence at the Mongolia-flagged Bandero's next port of call. Under international maritime law, an overtaking vessel has an obligation to stay clear of any nearby ship it's passing.

Bandero is named after the tequila company owned by John Paul DeJoria, an American billionaire who founded Paul Mitchell hair care products and has been a longtime supporter of Watson's endeavors.

This story has corrected the month that the Bandero left Australia to February, not March.

___ This story was supported by funding from the Walton Family Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. ___ Contact AP's global investigative team atInvestigative@ap.orgorhttps://www.ap.org/tips/

Activist vessel collides with krill trawler in Antarctic confrontation

MIAMI (AP) — A ship operated by a group founded by anti-whaling activist Paul Watson collided with an industrial krill tr...

 

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