Pages: Prev 1 2 3 ...35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 Next

Woman charged with shooting husband

A Pike woman was arrested after allegedly shooting her husband Sunday night during a domestic violence incident.

Chief Assistant Pike County Attorney Roger Varney said that Kentucky State Police responded to a domestic violence complaint at Kimper where it was reported that a wife had shot her husband.

“The investigation revealed (the husband, James Spradlin) had been shot once in each leg,” Varney said.

According to the arrest citation, Spradlin’s wife, Miriam S. Varney, 43, admitted to shooting her husband during an argument.

Varney, the citation said, alleged Spradlin had physically assaulted her.

Varney was arrested and charged with first-degree assault. She was arraigned Monday morning and later released on a property bond.

Victims’ families upset by Bartley actions

A woman convicted of two counts of ports Nash manslaughter in recent years in Kentucky and the special prosecutor in the case of the decision on the matter.

But the local department of the race, “said the wife is now even more control.

Thelma Bartley, 45, was killed and Deborah Marshall Atwood McClintock. They were killed after trying Bartley, turn left on Ohio 146, June 30, 2006, and collision with the couple, as they were riding Atwood’s motorcycle.
Bartley pleaded guilty in August to the charge and was in a prison sentence of eight years in prison, but a retired Fairfield County Common Pleas Judge William James Luse, and suspended all Bartley 90 days in the Muskingum County Jail.

Bartley’s driver’s license was also suspended for two years, and once released from prison, she was commissioned to SCRAM only an instrument to monitor the November 12, 2007, May 11, 2008. Bartley was also extended to five years’ probation.

Luse, that the remaining 51 days of SCRAM surveillance aircraft over the last month to Bartley for Kentucky.

Bartley could not be reached for comment and David Tarbert, Bartley’s when they attempt by the lawyer, said, it is not more to them.

Greg Peterson, Columbus, advocate and former Attorney General, the cases treated in the past year after the Muskingum County recused Parquet arising from the Court of Justice.

Peterson said he was surprised to learn that, first and foremost, just after he had spoken of a probation office within two weeks, inquiring whether Bartley has been set up with his probation.

“I think it’s rather a dramatic change in the conditions of his probation,” said Peterson. “Not only I was surprised when I learned these developments but I am surprised, I was not informed. We have the plea agreement for very specific reasons - one of them is Ms. Bartley was known in the region, and many people had their eyes on them, make sure she did what inquiry by the Tribunal. It was difficult for them to hide in Zanesville, but in Louisville, who knows what he can do. ”

Lindsay McClintock, Deborah’s daughter, said she is sick of the news.

“That does me am outraged,” she said. “I never took the plea agreement in the first place. It’s devastating.”

Atwood family feels the same.

“Nothing surprises me in this case,” said Brenda Atwood, the wife of former Marshall, and the mother of his two sons. “This woman has an insult to the whole system of justice.”

Melanie Richert, chief probation for Assistance adult probation Muskingum County Department, said the goal of the Division is to contribute to a sample, as Mr. Bartley, productive citizens and effective in each commune, and protects at the same time all the inhabitants of the town.

“We are doing what is best for the sample as long as it is not a risk to others,” said Richert. “Ms. Bartley removal in Kentucky, it has the support of the family and help them. ”

Bartley lived with their parents in Louisville, documents filed by the probation department.

Bartley had driving privileges for certain reasons, then a resident of Zanesville, as well as abroad to work or to AA meetings, but since their move to Kentucky, the privileges were suspended.

“They can no longer drive,” said Richert. “If she has to go somewhere, they must depend on their families.”

Bartley is expected for employment or probation in Kentucky, surveillance.

“That means it has two probation seeing now,” said Richert. “She called me and probation officer in Kentucky, to ensure that all sanctions following them. Office in Kentucky could also impose other provisions relating to it.”

Bartley an agreement signed before leaving, if it hurts, which indicates one of the provisions, it does not go to fight and stop before the delivery date.

“It was not an easy decision, because the office of Kentucky was mandated by federal law, a comprehensive and in-depth study, it has before it, and we had for a very long period of our own investigation” , said Richert.

Peterson said he feels Bartley tries to minimize the impact of the case by the move.

“I think it is a malaise for their Zanesville and the trial period was an introduction to them,” said Peterson. “Now it is to live in a new city, and there are consequences to hide their actions. ”

Peterson said, he knows, the decision to allow him to move was the full discretion of the judge, but Peterson would have liked to have had some input in the decision.

Ranch, deer association challenge Kentucky’s law banning importation of deer or elk

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A Tennessee Elk and Bison Ranch, and a deer National Kentucky farmers have defied the law on the prohibition of deer or elk is transported to the state.

Two Feathers Lyck and Bison Ranch, McMinville, Tennessee, and the North American Deer Farmers Association are asking a federal judge to declare Kentucky law unconstitutional because it restricts international trade.

”We do not believe they are the correct interpretation of the law,’’said Shawn Schafer, director of the Farmers Association of deer, a group of 800 people, which is headquartered in Lake City, Minn.

The operation and Jonathan Gassett group sued the commissioner Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, and Karen J. Alexy, director of the department of wildlife department on Friday at the US District Court, Lexington.

The telephone conversations and Gassett Alexy after 5 hours Friday were not immediately returned.

But Morgain Sprague, General Counsel for fish and wildlife department, the attorney for Two Feathers ranch a letter warning that all animals confiscated in Kentucky would be destroyed. He said that the law is constitutional and correctly interpreted.

”Your customers have free access to the interstates around the Commonwealth of Kentucky to import deer in Tennessee,”Sprague wrote.

State of Kentucky law prohibits the importation of deer and moose to protect the state of moose and white-tailed deer outbreaks of chronic wasting disease. Officials from the state have applied the law to prohibit someone from moose or deer lines of the state, even though the animals are destined for another state.

Violation of the law is a crime, up to $ 10000 and penalties of five years in prison.

This is problematic for Two Feathers ranch who wants to ship animals inside and from Kansas and Kentucky cross intergovernmental, Schafer said. The ranch Kentucky on permits for the transport of animals in rows of State, but was rejected, “said Schafer.

But Schafer said he believes that the prohibition of commerce clause of the Constitution. Kentucky, the law is discriminatory because it allows deer and elk farmers in the state to bring their animals around, he said.

Teens who shot horses sentenced

PIKEVILLE - Two teenagers are attacking and draw several horses in Eastern Kentucky were sentenced to six months in prison.

Pike Circuit Judge Eddy Coleman sentenced Jacob Leslie Ratliff Damron and Michael Ross, both 18, on Friday. Over time, and has served both as head of the prison for more than 99 days.

A official said the youth, driving a truck and armed with two shotguns and a pistol, introduced a herd of horses on a strip mine in the vicinity of Beaver Elkhorn City, in January 2007.

Three horses died of injuries several injuries, and five others were injured. A 4-year-old mare, was named Ghost shot more than 50 times.

A horse owner, Trish Varney said Friday that the sentence was fair.

As part of the transaction, and Damron Ratliff each had to pay $ 25000 to the return of the horses’ owners.

“A light sentence would be devaluing the gravity of the crime,” said Coleman Friday. “But too severe a penalty would be detrimental to their future. It can destroy any redeeming value of these gentlemen.”

Both had been convicted previously of the amount of crime and criminal stupidity cruelty to animals, permission to serve 30 days a package of information and also provide a redirection.

Coleman rejected the assertion that an agreement last year and sent the case to the court in September. A defective was declared after defender Stephen Owen said in a statement that the opening Damron impetus for taking medication. Coleman said alert lawyers, the Court does not have to defend a mental condition.

Jacob, Ratliff father, Mark Ratliff, said Friday that he hoped that Coleman was the crime of expunging their records.

“I think it is fair, but I think they deserve to be eliminated because they have never had to vote and do not have this record,” said Mark Ratliff. “Everyone can be a mistake in their lives. ”

Damron Ratliff, and pursued an Eastern Kentucky journalist for the television and identification before as adults. The police said WYMT-TV journalist, adolescents, “the name because they were 17 at the time of their arrest. News of the station went to the state.

Butler pleads guilty to charges

A Georgetown woman who was arrested three years ago on charges she stood by and watched as adults had sex with two teenage girls in her home pleaded guilty to amended charges Friday in Scott Circuit Court.

Deanna S. Butler, 42, of Georgetown, entered a guilty plea Friday to four counts of second-degree unlawful transaction with a minor.

Under the terms of her plea agreement, the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office agreed to amend Butler’s original charges of first-degree unlawful transaction with a minor to second-degree, and dismiss a persistent felony offender charge. The prosecutor recommended Butler be sentenced to three years on each count to be served concurrently.

Butler will remain on bail until her sentencing hearing set for May 2 in Scott Circuit Court.

Kentucky State Police initially arrested Butler and charged her with two counts of use of a minor under 16 in a sex performance, and Georgetown Police charged Butler with unlawful transaction with a minor.

Lawmaker who resigned takes $60,000 state job

FRANKFORT, Ky. — An eastern Kentucky lawmaker who resigned abruptly just three weeks before the start of the 2008 General Assembly session has taken a $60,000-a-year state job in the Transportation Cabinet.

Former Democratic state Rep. James Brandon Spencer of Prestonsburg left office in December. He was replaced by former Democratic Attorney General Greg Stumbo who had previously served the Floyd County district for 24 years.

Transportation Cabinet spokesman Chuck Wolfe said Spencer started work on Tuesday as a field representative in the Office of Intergovernmental Relations for eastern Kentucky working from an office in Pikeville.

Wolfe said his job duties include meeting with local officials to hear concerns about Transportation Cabinet programs and to help oversee state road projects.

74 Horses Removed from Kentucky Farm Recovering

One week after animal welfare officials removed 74 horses from Ingrid County, Ky, farm, the animals are in the advent of starch in their new environment.

“When they came to the first trailer were without conviction,” said Kim Hurst, president of the Humane Society-Jasmin, the group in search of horses.

Officials seized horses Clagett Sharon and her husband, Argo Clagett on March 26, authorities animal protection after examining a request, the horses were undernourished. Since then, Hurst said that the horses were complete for veterinary care, malnutrition and other complaints.

“They are treated bite, rain red, and other things that say veterinarians, with immune systems compromised by poor diet,” said Hurst.

Hurst said his agency is managing with the greatest horse of the seizure of its history. The cost of the first week of care approached $ 15000, she said. It considers that the monthly charges for long term care are between $ 8500 and $ 9000

“We are a small group and it is overwhelming,” she said. “But we did.”

The flock of Clagetts yet own, it remains Ingrid Humane Society in detention until a judge for the conduct of horses’ ownership. ”

“Theyre evidence in the case,” said Hurst. “If the Landkreis Releases, proof, they can go to their owner.”

According to Ingrid County Sheriff Kevin Corman, Sharon and Argo Clagett were respectively 70 counts of crime of second degree cruelty to animals. Each of these services contributes count penalties up to $ 500 in cash, and penalties of up to 12 months in prison. The couple is scheduled to appear in District Court Ingrid, on April 23 an answer to the charge.

CentrePointe developers ask to postpone review

In a surprise move, developers of the proposed $ 250 million Project Centre Pointe’s initiative and asked the Court House Review Board field of design, on Wednesday for a 60-day postponement before to hear their case.

The agreement on hastily moving has been a little over two hours earlier, at a meeting with developers Dudley Webb, his nephew Woodford Webb, his lawyer Darby Turner, Joe Rosenberg, a businessman, vice - Mayor Jim Gray and by telephone, Hayward Wilkirson the Lexington Preserve.

That measure, under the direction of a potential heated public meeting in the city chambers County opponent who often at hotel-condominium project.

In addition, by the confrontation with the Design Review Board, the report recommends that its staff that the implementation of the Centre Pointe postponed because it was incomplete. More specifically, for not showing the economic potential of the history of existing buildings if they were restored, and its “highest and most fruitful.”

The project can not, without the permission of the Board.

Dudley Webb, said 60 days “to give time to tell our page of history”, and talk of relocation Farmers Market, and the opportunities for entertainment are removed by the project, with an entire block.

During this cooling-off Legislature, not on the block of the building is demolished, including the four demolition permit, the city in expectation of the Division of Building Inspection.

Webb plans a public meeting, the Centre Pointe Kentucky theater with architects and engineers to answer questions: “What can and should not happen”, the change in the shape of the building 35 floors, and for public contributions to the aesthetics of the design, such as the windows and form of the tower.

Webb, in a meeting held on Saturday in Kentucky, the theatre was filled with humans against the proposed Centre Pointe, as it is.

Changes in the design of buildings is not what Webb, “he said in mind.

Thickness and the land will not change, he said, and the design will not change for all historic buildings.

Vocal opponents of skyscrapers him have said that the amount - it would be one of the highest buildings in the city - this is not a problem, “said Webb”, it was reassuring to me. ”

He said that most of the objections are based on the size and appearance of the building from the street.

Given that, for access to one of the 14 historic buildings on the block: “It is impossible,” he said. “It is the building that is not economically feasible, but you can not get permission to build and a tall building. Nor can the more faades and construct a building.”

He said: “They are two options open to the Community, and the Commonwealth must decide. We are as far as we can. At some point, in the municipality to decide who it wants. ”

Gray said he was “very grateful, Dudley is ready to talk, but the interview has some to the preservation of the historic fabric of this block. For the rest, I am not sure what we are talking about.”

Wilkirson, said: “If we can not talk about the inclusion of some of the historic architecture on the block, there is not much to discuss.”

Architect for the project by Jim Culpepper with the company in Atlanta Culpepper, McAuliffe and Meader was prepared in the city, in order to bring the case before the Design Review Board niederreißend for old buildings and architectural design features a peak Centre.

When moving the hearing soon, the public was invited to see Culpepper presentation shows a representation of the architectural look of the Centre Pointe only in the context of existing buildings at the Main Street.

Webb, which has developed many projects in Kentucky, Lexington, including the Greens, financial management and Centre-du festival market in Lexington, said he would convey about this project, “with a little more patience that we would have in the old days. ”

“We take care of what people think. They are our neighbours, our friends, our families,” he said.

Son charged with killing parents in northern Kentucky

DRY RIDGE, Ky. (AP) — State police say they have charged a 22-year-old man with killing his parents.

The bodies of Terry and Lynda Bramlage were found in November at their home in Grant County in northern Kentucky.

Police say they arrested the couple’s son, Russell G. Bramlage, on Tuesday and charged him with two counts of murder, tampering with physical evidence, two counts of criminal possession of a forged instrument and three counts of theft by unlawful taking.

It could not be immediately determined whether Bramlage had an attorney.

Blumenthal sues FDA over OxyContin inactivity

HARTFORD, Conn. - Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal is verklagend the federal government, because he said, it is not fair to warn consumers about the side effects of pain medication OxyContin controversy.

The drug has been the subject of an appeal by several civil prosecution service, and a federal criminal investigation, to $ 634.5 million in penalties for producers of Purdue Pharma.

Preparation is the passion for addicts was created on the topic, and believes Blumenthal of the Food and Drug Administration, but not enough. He presented his activities to federal court Monday.

“The FDA is ignorance of the risks of side effects and side effects, and the abuse and dependence, it is not to ask more of a black box warning or security alarm of Health public, the board, “said Blumenthal.

“The FDA has a moral and legal responsibility to ensure that patients and providers to fully understand the potential dangers of OxyContin inappropriately verschreibenden. Inaction by the FDA is completely incomprehensible and unacceptable that the public health and Security is clearly in danger. ”

Blumenthal acknowledged the other has positive effects, if used properly, but also said internal documents of the Purdue Pharma have shown many doctors do not understand OxyContin control the release and delivery requirement was inappropriate.

Blumenthal an application with the FDA four years ago, and cautioned the FDA to stop, it ignores in July of last year. His complaint requests that the FDA, idleness and to be declared illegal, that the decision of the FDA regarding any of 30 days after the declaration.

Purdue Pharma paid $ 20 million to 27 prosecution service last May, Kentucky, then-Attorney General Greg Stumbo rented a contribution to the campaign of its own file suit in October.

Purdue Pharma-$ 10 million municipal West Virginia Attorney General Darrell McGraw has a big debate between McGraw, the state and federal legislators Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.


Criminal Defense Attorney Kentucky, Accidents Attorney Kentucky, DWI Attorney Kentucky, DUI Attorney Kentucky, Drug crimes Attorney Kentucky, Lemon Law Attorney Kentucky, Tax Attorney Kentucky, Medical malpractice Attorney Kentucky, Mesothelioma Attorney Kentucky, Adoptions Attorney Kentucky, Automobile accidents Attorney Kentucky, Bankruptcy Attorney Kentucky, Business law Attorney Kentucky, Child custody Attorney Kentucky, Child support Attorney Kentucky, Civil rights Attorney Kentucky, Construction law Attorney Kentucky, Consumer fraud Attorney Kentucky, Consumer law Attorney Kentucky, Discrimination Attorney Kentucky, Divorce Attorney Kentucky, Elder law Attorney Kentucky, Entertainment law Attorney Kentucky, Estate planning Attorney Kentucky, Family law Attorney Kentucky, General practice Attorney Kentucky, Health care Attorney Kentucky, Immigration Attorney Kentucky, Insurance Attorney Kentucky, Military law Attorney Kentucky, Patents Attorney Kentucky, Personal injury Attorney Kentucky, Products liability Attorney Kentucky, Real estate Attorney Kentucky, Securities Attorney Kentucky, Traffic violations Attorney Kentucky, Trusts and estates Attorney Kentucky, Wills and probate Attorney Kentucky, Workers compensation Attorney Kentucky, Zoning, planning and land use Attorney Kentucky, Employee benefits Attorney Kentucky, Legal malpractice Attorney Kentucky