Kentucky
Kentucky legislative committee revisits charitable bail regulations – 89.3 WFPL News Louisville
Months after failing to go a invoice that may limit charitable bail organizations, Kentucky lawmakers as soon as once more mentioned the difficulty in an informational assembly.
Representatives from the Louisville Bail Venture spoke earlier than the interim joint judiciary committee in Frankfort on Thursday.
Shameka Parrish-Wright, an organizer for the Louisville Bail Venture who met with the committee, mentioned the funds assist low-income Kentuckians who’re adversely affected by the money bail system.
“The human toll of money bail is catastrophic, levied nearly completely on the poor and disproportionately on communities of coloration,” Parrish-Wright mentioned. “People who find themselves jailed pre-trial typically wait months and typically years for his or her instances to resolve. Within the meantime, they’ll lose their jobs, their properties, their kids, and important group ties.”
Charitable bail organizations crowdsource cash to get individuals out of jail.
Earlier this 12 months, Kentucky’s Republican-led Home tried to put restrictions on charitable bail operations, however the invoice died within the Senate.
Carrie Cole, with the Bail Venture, mentioned the group eases mass incarceration by stopping a mean of 51 days of jail time for its almost 4,000 shoppers within the state.
“This quantities to over 200,000 extra jail days served,” Cole mentioned. “By stopping the pointless incarceration that outcomes from wealth-based consideration, we estimate that the Bail Venture providers have saved Kentucky’s taxpayers roughly $15.3 million {dollars} since 2018.”
GOP State Rep. John Blanton, who sponsored the invoice to restrict the teams, disagreed with their function within the legal justice system.
“The very fact of the matter is mass incarceration has nothing to do with whether or not you must bail anyone out or whether or not you’ll be able to’t,” Blanton mentioned. “Mass incarceration has to do with the very fact persons are committing crimes, they usually’re getting caught committing crimes.”
Some Republicans on the committee claimed the teams contribute to will increase in crime. Others mentioned that lawmakers wanted to think about how proposed restrictions might negatively affect poor communities all through Kentucky.
Blanton urged committee members to compromise on rules.
“Let’s not go down this street of getting underneath the guise of creating us really feel higher about ourselves, making a society the place we create extra crimes,” Blanton mentioned. “As a result of when you may have extra crimes, you may have extra victims.”
Kentucky
Liberty 38-21 Western Kentucky (Nov 23, 2024) Game Recap – ESPN
LYNCHBURG, Va. — — Quinton Cooley rushed for 166 yards and two touchdowns, Billy Lucas added 131 yards and a score, and Liberty gained 419 on the ground with four touchdowns in a 38-21 victory over Western Kentucky on Saturday.
Liberty (8-2, 5-2 Conference USA) has won eight-plus games for the sixth consecutive season to keep alive hopes of a second straight trip to the conference championship game. The Flames play Sam Houston (8-3, 5-2) on Friday.
Liberty scored 21 straight points to close the first quarter, the last covering 90 yards in just 45 seconds to take a 21-7 lead.
Amarian Williams made two interceptions, including one with 2:03 remaining to seal it. Caden Veltkamp was intercepted three times before finishing 20 of 34 for 262 yards and two touchdowns for Western Kentucky (7-4, 5-2).
Cooley reached 1,000 yards rushing for the second straight season. The Flames entered ranked No. 5 nationally in rushing yards/game (249.8). Quarterback Kaidon Salter also carried 11 times for 66 yards and a touchdown. Three other players had at least two rushes for Liberty, which ended with 63 carries.
The Flames, in their season finale at Williams Stadium, avoided dropping multiple conference games at home for the first time since 2005.
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Kentucky
Senior Class Shines on Senior Day as No. 12 Kentucky Captures Eighth-Straight SEC Title
Thanks to a balanced effort from the senior class, the No. 12 Kentucky Volleyball team captured at least a share of an eighth-straight Southeastern Conference championship on Sunday afternoon, downing Arkansas in straight sets (26-24, 25-20, 25-13) on Senior Day inside Historic Memorial Coliseum.
The Kentucky seniors have been an integral part of the program since they first stepped on the court, a theme that continued in the match against the Razorbacks as seniors Emma Grome, Megan Wilson, Eleanor Beavin, and Erin Lamb all played key roles in the Cats’ sweep of Arkansas.
Following the match, UK head coach Craig Skinner attributed the team’s success to a staff dedicated to preparation, and a team of athletes who embraced the challenge involved in competing for a championship.
“I’ve gotta give a lot of credit to our staff,” Skinner said. “Our staff was unbelievable this year, Ben (Josephson), and Merideth (Jewell), and Madison (Lilley) did a hell of a job coaching this team and getting them prepared to play against great competition, so that’s the first thing.
“And the second thing, when you recruit athletes to compete for championships they know the expectations and the standards and that’s what they want. We’ve been shooting for the top ever since I’ve gotten here and we don’t wanna go anywhere else.”
Offensively, Grome paced the Kentucky attack to 40 total kills on a .312 hitting clip. Four Wildcats totaled six or more kills, led by sophomore Brooklyn DeLeye who finished with 13. It was Wilson who stole the show Sunday, however, as the senior right side found the floor with 12 kills on a sweltering .500 clip. In her second match back from injury, Lamb added seven kills to the winning cause and Jordyn Dailey totaled six.
Kentucky stifled the Razorbacks at the net as they racked up 8.0 rejections and held Arkansas to .130 hitting. In the third and final set, Arkansas totaled only four kills with three errors as the Cats coasted to the set and match victory. Brooke Bultema led the way with 5.0 blocks, Wilson had 4.0, Dailey finished with 3.0, and Grome and DeLeye each had a pair.
Molly Tuozzo continued to anchor the back line as she totaled 19 digs to lead all players. DeLeye added 11, Grome had 10, and Beavin had seven.
Beavin made her biggest impact from behind the service line, as the senior served up a match-high four aces. Lamb and DeLeye each had two of their own and Grome finished with one.
With the win, Kentucky improves to 19-7 on the season and 13-2 in the SEC. The victory locked up at least a share of the SEC title for the Cats for a program-best eighth-consecutive year.
UK will conclude the regular season on Wednesday as they travel to Columbia, Missouri for a matchup with No. 25 Missouri. If Kentucky leaves Columbia with a victory, they will claim the conference championship outright as Florida and Texas sit a game behind them in the standings. First serve against the Tigers is set for 7:00 pm ET.
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Kentucky
Former Sheriff Shawn ‘Mickey’ Stines indicted for murder of Kentucky judge
Two months after video showed him shooting a Kentucky judge at point-blank range in his chambers, former Sheriff Shawn ‘Mickey’ Stines has been indicted for murder.
The indictment, announced jointly by state and local prosecutors, charges Stines with shooting and killing Letcher County District Court Judge Kevin Mullins. Stines is scheduled to appear for his arraignment on Monday, Nov. 25.
RELATED STORY | Video shows Kentucky judge try to hide as he’s gunned down in chambers
At a probable cause hearing in October, prosecutors showed a silent video that appeared to show Stines walking into the judge’s chambers with a weapon and firing multiple times at the victim, who frantically tried to escape under his desk.
Stines, who was sheriff at the time of the shooting, resigned on Oct. 1, hours before appearing in court to plead not guilty to murder charges.
RELATED STORY | Kentucky sheriff charged with fatally shooting a judge pleads not guilty in first court appearance
Investigators have not offered any potential motive for the murder. Those who knew Stines and Mullins said the two had worked together for years and were friends.
To date, prosecutors have not announced whether they will seek the death penalty.
This story was originally published by Lauren Silver at Court TV.
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