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Show what the markets are doing. ce We want to help ensure you have all The value of perspective y o u n e e d f o r t o d a y, tomorrow and g for genOpinion erations toService come. Lhelps et’s staensure rt Our Second he conversation. eyou’re d tgetting the financial advice you need A-12 The Park Record Case of 2 kids who vanished in Idaho takes a grim turn REBECCA BOONE Associated Press The value of perspective With so much at stake when it comes to protecting everything you’ve worked so hard to achieve, it never hurts to get a second opinion about your financial future. At Mogul Financial Group, our approach starts by understanding your life and what you want to accomplish. Then we work together to create a framework designed to give you the confidence to do what matters most, no matter what the markets are doing. 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Nhelp oahensure Leviyou nehave all you need for today, tomorrow We want to and for generations Senior Vtoiccome. e PreLet’s sidestart nt- the Invconversation estments noah.levine@ubs.com Glen Mintz Sen i o r Po r t f o l i o M anager Managing Director glen.mintz@ubs.com Greg Golding, CIMA®N,oaC WS ® h Levine Sene ioa r Vlit ceh PreM sidena t- n Inva esg tme enm t s en t Senior Vice President- W noah.levine@ubs.com gregory.golding@ubs.coGm reg Golding, CIMA®, CWS® Senior Vice President- Wealth Management gregory.golding@ubs.com Mogul Financial GrouMpogul Financial Group UBS Financial Services Inc. UBS Financial Services255IHnebcer.Avenue Park City, UT 84060 435-252-3825__ 2 5 5 H e b e r A v e n u e ubs.com/team/mogul Park City, UT 84060 435-252-3825__ As a firm providing wealth management services to clients, UBS Financial Services Inc. offers both investment advisory services and brokerage services. Investment advisory services and brokerage services are separate and distinct, differ in material ways and are governed by different laws and separate arrangements. It is important that clients understand the ways in which we conduct business and that they carefully read the agreements and disclosures that we provide to them about the products or services we offer. For more information visit our website at ubs.com/workingwithus. CIMA® is a registered certification mark of the Investment Management Consultants Association, Inc. in the United States of America and worldwide. For designation disclosures visit https://www.ubs.com/us/en/designation-disclosures.html. ©UBS 2019. All rights reserved. UBS Financial Services Inc. is a subsidiary of UBS AG. Member FINRA/SIPC. D-UBS-977E6BCA BOISE, Idaho — It was the extended family who grew suspicious first, and then at their urging, local police: Seven-year-old Joshua “JJ” Vallow and his 17-year-old sister Tylee Ryan hadn’t been seen in far too long, and their mother wouldn’t give a straight answer about where they were. Soon strangers around the world were following the case, transfixed by the increasingly strange circumstances surrounding Lori Vallow Daybell and her new husband, Chad Daybell. The investigation grew to include the mysterious deaths of their former spouses, rumors of doomsday cult-like beliefs and their sudden move to Hawaii. The case took a grim turn this week when investigators announced they found human remains while searching Chad Daybell’s property in rural Idaho. In a field near his house, the FBI and local authorities erected canopies, draped blue tarps on the ground and brought in heavy equipment to dig. Victim advocates began calling family members Tuesday, telling them about the remains. Relatives released a statement the next day, saying the bodies belonged to JJ and Tylee. But officials have yet to confirm that. Earlier Wednesday, Chad Daybell was charged with concealing or destroying human remains. His attorney didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Lori Daybell already has been charged with child abandonment, obstructing an investigation, contempt of court and soliciting a crime. Her attorney has said she intends to defend herself against the charges. The Daybells are both in jail on $1 million bond. Court documents suggest JOURNALISM. SUPPORT YOUR COMMUNITY. SUBSCRIBE OR DONATE TODAY! that things began to unravel for the family early last year, when Lori was still married to Charles Vallow. The couple were estranged, and Vallow had filed for divorce, saying he feared she would kill him and that she had developed cult-like beliefs. He said she claimed to be “a god assigned to carry out the work of the 144,000 at Christ’s second coming in July 2020.” The family was living in a Phoenix suburb in July when Lori’s brother, Alex Cox, shot and killed Vallow. He asserted that the shooting was in self-defense after Vallow came at him with a baseball bat. Police investigated, but the case didn’t go far before Cox died of a blood clot in his lung in December. Lori Vallow moved to Idaho with the kids, getting an apartment in the small town of Rexburg and spending time with Chad Daybell. The couple had known each other for a while, sometimes participating in podcasts about preparing for the biblical end times for an online organization aimed at members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. At the time, he was married to Tammy Daybell, a fit 49-year-old school librarian who helped him run a small publishing company. Chad Daybell also had written several books, largely focused on doomsday scenarios and loosely based on church theology. Tammy Daybell died in October, her obituary saying she passed away in her sleep of natural causes. The family declined an autopsy before she was buried in Utah. About two weeks later, Chad Daybell married Lori Vallow. The quick marriage drew the suspicion of officers, who had Tammy Daybell’s body exhumed for an investigation. The results of that autopsy have not yet been released. Meanwhile, JJ’s grandpar- ents, Larry and Kay Woodcock of Louisiana, were growing increasingly worried about the kids. They said once-regular phone calls with JJ had grown infrequent and then stopped altogether. They said Lori Daybell wouldn’t tell them why the boy was always unavailable. Tylee was last seen in early September headed into Yellowstone National Park with her mom and other family for a day trip, and JJ was last seen by school officials later that month. The Woodcocks asked Rexburg police to check on the kids. When officers stopped by to question Lori Daybell, they said she and Chad Daybell lied about the children’s whereabouts. When investigators returned the next day to follow up, the Daybells were gone. While the couple slipped away to Hawaii, the investigation pushed forward in Idaho, Arizona and Utah. Eventually, they were found in the islands, and a judge ordered Lori Daybell to bring the children to officials to prove they were safe. She refused and was charged with child abandonment and other crimes, then extradited to Idaho. In the weeks since, the Idaho attorney general’s office took over the investigation into Tammy Daybell’s death and children’s bodies were found on Chad Daybell’s property. Though relatives say those remains are Tylee and JJ, they are still waiting for answers. They watched JJ’s birthday arrive in late May. “Our feelings of extreme anguish and despondency were prevelant throught the period approaching JJ’s 8th birthday,” Kay Woodcock wrote in a Facebook post. “Our Rexburg family hosted a poignant vigil on Monday 5/25 in honor of our little man ... We are comforted knowing their commitment is as strong as ours.” Romney will ‘stay quiet’ on 2020 presidential vote ervices Inc. offers both investment advisory services and brokerage services. ct, differ in material ways and are governed by different laws and separate onduct business and that they carefully read the agreements and disclosures nformation visit our website at ubs.com/workingwithus. CIMA® is a ssociation, Inc. in the United States of America and worldwide. For ures.html. ©UBS 2019. All rights reserved. UBS Financial Services Inc. is a SUPPORT LOCAL Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, June 13-16, 2020 Senator has been a frequent critic of President Trump ANDREW TAYLOR AND ELANA SCHOR Associated Press WASHINGTON — Utah Sen. Mitt Romney on Monday became the latest prominent Republican to cast doubt on his support for President Donald Trump’s reelection, saying he would “stay quiet” about whom he’ll be supporting in November. Romney, the 2012 Republican presidential nominee, told reporters on Capitol Hill that “I’m not going to be describing who I’ll be voting for.” His open acknowledgment of hesitance in supporting Trump comes after former Trump defense secretary Gen. James Mattis and Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski aired criticism of the president’s handling of ongoing protests against the police killings of black Americans. In 2016, Romney said publicly that he would support neither Trump nor Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton. He later said that he had cast his vote for his wife, Ann. Retired Gen. Colin Powell, who served as President George W. Bush’s secretary of state, took a stronger step away from Trump, telling CNN on Sunday that he would support presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden this November. Powell had said he voted for Clinton in 2016. The relationship between Trump and Romney is acrimonious. Romney was the only GOP senator to support removing Trump from office after the president’s impeachment trial earlier this year. Trump has derided him as a “fool” and a “failed presidential candidate.” After the senator attended a march for racial justice on Sunday, declaring that “black lives matter,” Trump tweeted sarcastically about Romney’s “sincerity.” Romney shrugged off that dig Monday, saying that Trump has “got time to do whatever he feels is appropriate” and that “I would presume” the president would consider supporting a police reform measure, given his public expressions of concern about the killing of George Floyd, a handcuffed black man, by a white officer in Minneapolis. See page B-7 for just a few of the cats and dogs available for adoption |