Kentucky
Kentucky Open Government Coalition counts down top open government stories of 2023 – NKyTribune
By Amye Bensenhaver
Kentucky Open Government Coalition
The Kentucky Open Government Coalition has once again compiled a list of the Top Ten Open Government Stories of the past year.
The central theme in 2023 was the continuing role of the courts in safeguarding rights guaranteed under Kentucky’s open government laws. For nearly every public agency abuse of the open records and open meetings laws, there was an equal and opposite judicial repudiation. Whether the abuse resulted from ignorance of or contempt for the laws, Kentucky’s courts remained the bulwark against public agency and public official affronts to Kentuckians’ statutorily guaranteed “right to be informed what their government is doing.”
Here are the Coalition’s Top Ten Open Government Stories of 2023.
1. Kentucky Attorney General’s engages in violation of the open records law over a period of three-and-a-half years
An open records dispute that commenced in July 2020 — with the submission of a request to the Office of the Kentucky Attorney General for records relating to the Kentucky Absentee Ballot Integrity Task Force by the “nonprofit, nonpartisan watchdog” American Oversight — culminated in a strongly worded Franklin Circuit Court opinion issued on July 14, 2022, holding that the OAG committed multiple open records violations.
Although the Attorney General did not appeal the Franklin Circuit Court’s opinion, he and his staff continued to obfuscate — delaying production of all responsive records and necessitating multiple trips back to court.
In July, 2023, the court authorized American Oversight “to conduct depositions of the designated representative(s) of OAG to address any factual disputes that remain unresolved regarding compliance with the prior Orders of this Court, including the scope of the OAG’s original and supplemental searches for the requested documents.”
“It appears,” the court observed, “that there continues to be a dispute as to whether the Attorney General has produced all documents and records that are required to be produced under the Open Records Act.”
The three-and-a-half year old case, we are advised, is moving toward settlement.
American Oversight v Office of the Attorney General is a reminder that the Office of the Attorney General enjoys no special privilege under Kentucky’s open government laws. Its resolution by settlement is lamentable only to the extent that critical issues it presents — in particular, the adequacy of the agency’s search for records — must await future opportunities for appellate review.
2. Louisville Metro’s track record on open records and open meetings compliance deteriorates
Secret police chief searches; nondisclosure agreements; closed collective bargaining negotiations with the Fraternal Order of Police; multiple adverse Attorney General’s open records decisions based on arbitrary delays in records production; and revelations that the backlog of open records requests has more than doubled in year one.
Extensive reporting on these affronts to transparency dashed any hope for measurable improvement in open records and open meetings compliance in the first year of Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg’s administration.
Greenberg repeatedly claimed that he was constrained by the open records and meetings laws to conduct a secret police chief search and to engage in closed collective bargaining sessions with the Fraternal Order of Police. He lamented the open records backlog, but gave no indication he was willing to expand efforts beyond those that had thus far failed.
As the Kentucky Open Government Coalition observed, “The fault, Mayor Greenberg, is not in the law but in the choices you made.”
3. Kentucky Supreme Court will decide the scope of public access to law enforcement records in open investigations
In November 2022, the Court of Appeals ruled that “[G]eneral allegations of potential harm which would seem to apply in any criminal investigation’ are not sufficient to justify wholesale denial of an open records request for records relating to an open investigation.”
The underlying case, Courier Journal Inc. v Shively Police Department, resulted from the denial of a request for records relating to a high speed chase that ended in the deaths of a woman, her son, and a baby. In it, the court reaffirmed longstanding interpretation of the “law enforcement” exception to the open records law, KRS 61.878(1)(h), requiring proof of actual, concrete harm to an open investigation from premature disclosure of records compiled by a law enforcement agency to justify nondisclosure.
But the court went a step further.
The unanimous appellate panel expressly rejected broad application of KRS 17.150(2) “to restrict all access to information which law enforcement has which may pertain to a prospective law enforcement action,” observing that past opinions of the Attorney General and arguments advanced by law enforcement agencies “are not controlling, and we disagree with such an interpretation based on the statutory language.”
In January 2023, Shively asked the Kentucky Supreme Court to review the opinion of the Court of Appeals. On August 16, the Court granted Shively’s request. The parties subsequently briefed the case, and amicus briefs were filed — one in support of the Courier Journal’s position by retired Jefferson Circuit Court Judge John Potter and the Kentucky Open Government Coalition and another in support of the Shively Police Department by the Kentucky Attorney General.
Oral argument in the Supreme Court, and final resolution of this controversial issue, is anticipated in 2024.
4. League of Women Voters report exposes legislative schemes undermining participatory democracy
On November 29, the League of Women Voters of Kentucky published a study examining “Transparency and Citizen Participation in Kentucky’s Legislative Process” and asking the recurring question, “How Can They Do That?”
A League task force “reviewed provisions of the Kentucky Constitution, the House and Senate Rules, and the legislative record for all bills that became law during the seven 60-day legislative sessions: 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018, and 2022,” identifying the “procedures that make it increasingly difficult for citizens to be informed and active participants in legislation.”
Data analysis substantiated the threat to participatory democracy and legislative accountability in the Commonwealth of current General Assembly practices.
It is a threat that the Kentucky Open Government Coalition have condemned since the Coalition’s creation in 2019.
Adding insult to injury, in early December The Kentucky Lantern reported on a little noticed statute enacted in 2022 that eliminated the legislative process for pre-filing bills.
HB 10 “amended KRS 7.090 to remove the ability of interim joint committees to pre-file bills [and] repealed KRS 6.245, relating to pre-session filing of bills.”
This, coupled with the League’s findings and a 2021 law excluding the General Assembly and the Legislative Research Commission from the open records law, eliminated the last vestige of Kentucky lawmakers’ accountability to the constituents they serve.
In a Facebook post, the Kentucky Open Government Coalition highlighted an example of an ill-conceived pre-filed open records bill from 2019 that was wisely withdrawn as a result of stakeholder input.
No more.
“HB 10,” we concluded,” was clearly “intended to eliminate the public’s voice at a critical stage in the evolution of a bill.”
5. Court of Appeals resolves public discussion on private devices dispute in favor of public access but litigation continues
Open government advocates celebrated an October 27 opinion of the Kentucky Court of Appeals declaring that “[electronic] messages stored on personal cell phones are public records when such messages are prepared by or used by the members of the Commission and relate to or concern Commission business.”
The court’s opinion in Kentucky Open Government Coalition v Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources Commission turned on the expansive statutory definition of the terms “public record” and “public agency,” and on its rejection of the Commission’s privacy and undue burden arguments. But at a basic policy level, the opinion emphasized:
“To hold otherwise would certainly defeat the underlying purpose of the Open Records Act as public officials could easily evade disclosure of public records by simply utilizing their personal cell phones.”
To “assuage any concerns the Kentucky Open Records Act requires public agencies to turn over private cell phones” or mandates wholesale disclosure of “all public records generated on private cell phones or private email accounts,” the court emphasized that the opinion “merely holds that ‘text messages [or emails] related to Commission business and stored on personal cell phones [or personal email accounts] of its members are public records generally subject to disclosure under the Open Records Act absent an applicable exception.’”
The Coalition’s celebration was short-lived.
Despite the court’s assurances — and the logic of its analysis — the Commission petitioned the Supreme Court for discretionary review of the opinion of the Court of Appeals on November 22. The Court has not yet ruled on the Commission’s petition.
In the meantime, public officials across the Commonwealth continue to exploit the resulting legal chaos.
6. The 490 Project settles a first-of-its-kind open records lawsuit against Louisville Metro Police Department
On April 19, a Louisville-based community organization focusing on police accountability — The 490 Project — announced the settlement of itsopen records lawsuit against Louisville Metro Police Department, a persistent open records offender. LMPD agreed to release 400 citizen complaints against LMPD officers — with limited redactions — within 14 days and to pay $15,256 in attorneys’ fees and costs to The 490 Project.
In October 2022, The 490 Project filed suit against LMPD for refusing to comply with its statutory duty to take final action on open records requests within five business days — either by disclosing nonexempt public records or identifying the legal basis for nondisclosure.
“But,” the Kentucky Open Government Coalition emphasized in an op-ed published shortly after the lawsuit was filed, “in a first-of-its-kind claim, the group alleged that LMPD subverted the intent of the open records law through the premature and illegal destruction of public records — in this case, complaints leveled against police officer that LMPD designates ‘informal’ — in contravention of state law governing the minimum retention of those records.
“This critical public records abuse has largely evaded public notice but has long been employed by public agencies as a means of evading public accountability.”
“There’s nothing sexy or cool about record retention policies,” said 490 Project organizer Cara Tobe about the group’s lawsuit, “but [they are] really important.”
The settlement was “a clear win for judicial economy[,] a clear win for taxpayers[,] and a clear and long overdue win for police accountability.”
Sadly, LMPD and Louisville Metro continue to engage in illegal conduct that thwarts access to public records to the present.
7. Oldham County Circuit Court instructs the Attorney General on the importance of legal precedent
On June 13, the Oldham County Circuit Court handed Attorney General Daniel Cameron a major defeat, reversing Cameron’s open meetings decision, 22-OMD-187, and ruling that the Oldham County Ethics Commission violated the open meetings law when it conducted a closed session that did not conform to statutory requirements designed to “maximize notice of public meetings and actions.”
In J. Albert Harrison v. Oldham County Ethics Commission, Judge Jerry Crosby II reversed a September 2022 Cameron open meetings decision in which the the Attorney General determined that although the county Ethics Commission failed to comply with statutory requirements for conducting a closed session, the Commission’s noncompliance did not violate the open meetings law.
While the court’s insistence that “an administrative agency [like the Attorney General acting under authority of KRS 61.880(2)] either must conform with its own precedents or explain its departure from them” is the single most most important takeaway in the Harrison opinion, the court also reaffirmed longstanding interpretation of the open meetings law.
In reversing the Attorney General’s decision, and voiding the action illegally taken by the Commission in closed session, Judge Crosby focused on the Attorney General’s unexplained departure from an interpretation of KRS 61.815(1) and (2) that “goes back forty plus years with no overt repudiation by the Courts or the legislature as to a different interpretation.”
Cameron’s interpretation of the statute, Judge Crosby determined, “would eviscerate most of the Open Meetings Act’s operative provisions.”
In an op-ed published shortly after the Oldham Circuit Court’s opinion was issued, the Kentucky Open Government Coalition urged Cameron’s successor to “resist the temptation to elevate his policy preference over precedent.”
“Perhaps,” we noted, “Cameron himself will learn about the importance of precedent from the defeat recently handed to him by the Oldham Circuit Count. We have not fought the battle to shine a light on state and local government for nearly 50 years only to have Cameron, or his successor, arbitrarily shut it off.”
The case has been appealed to the Kentucky Court of Appeals.
8. Louisville Metro Police Department’s Records Management Audit reveals poor oversight and faulty records management but no illegal acts
Following a series of delays, Louisville Metro released the Records Management Audit — ordered by the Louisville Metro Council on the heels of the lawsuit filed by a nonprofit police accountability group, The 490 Project — in late September.
The unprecedented records management audit of Louisville Metro Police Department — conducted over several months by Louisville Metro’s Office of Internal Audit — exposed serious deficiencies in the January 1, 2018 through December 19, 2022 review period, including:
• failure to assign responsibility for oversight of record retention at LMPD to a specific individual or unit;
• failure to conduct annual reviews of LMPD’s records retention schedule (the Kentucky Libraries, Archives, and Records Commission approved requirements for retention and destruction of public records promulgated into state regulation); and
• lack of oversight for record retention across all of Louisville Metro Government.
As a consequence, public records were misdirected, misfiled, or missing altogether. The auditors found no illegalities — a questionable finding in light of evidence of unauthorized records concealment and premature destruction of public records.
Despite the seriousness of these findings, the OIA issued a relatively mild “internal control assessment rating of ‘Needs Improvement,’ indicating that the identified issues impact on operations is likely contained.” The rating was based on a “thorough understanding of the process(es) for LMPD’s records retention and management… obtained through interviews with key personnel and examination of supporting documentation.”
In an op-ed issued not long after the audit was released, the Kentucky Open Government Coalition questioned the existence of concrete steps for “pursuing corrective action on each of OIA’s nine recommendations — most with a target implementation date of August 1, 2024.” We reminded Louisville Metro and LMPD that “The 490 Project (and the Kentucky Open Government Coalition) will be tracking their progress.”
“We cannot permit the corrective actions to which LMPD and Louisville Metro have committed to languish in indifference and obscurity.
“Nor can we permit The 490 Project’s victory in its open records/records management litigation against LMPD — and the Metro Council’s commitment to securing reform in LMPD’s open records/records management programs — to be forgotten.
“The real work now begins.”
9. The courts vindicate fundamental open records principles in additional legal actions
Two other open records cases are worthy of note in the Top Ten Open Government Stories of 2023.
In an opinion issued on August 22, the Jefferson Circuit Court dismissed Louisville Metro’s open records lawsuit against open records requester Lawrence Trageser.
In Louisville County Metro Government v Lawrence Trageser, Judge Eric Haner determined:
“Louisville Metro’s position [that the Attorney General is required to ‘moot’ an appeal if all records are provided after the appeal is filed] is unreasonable because it would allow any public agency to extend the five-day requirement under KRS 61.880(1) unilaterally by forcing a requester to file a complaint with the Attorney General before responding to his request for records.”
Although correctly affirmed Trageser’s position that his appeal was not “moot,” and that the Attorney General properly found that Louisville violated the open records law, it rejected Trageser’s request for penalties and costs, including reasonable attorney’s fees.
In a blog post, the Kentucky Open Government Coalition questioned this decision:
“The court’s mixed messages may disincentivizes the cynical Louisville Metro (read “public agencies, in general) practice of ignoring statutory deadlines for responding to open records request until an open records appeal is filed. But it simultaneously incentivizes the same cynical practice by imposing a financial burden on Trageser to defend the lawsuit initiated against him — which he won.
“It’s no big deal for Louisville Metro to squander taxpayer dollars to sue private citizens to defend its ‘right’ to violate the open records law. Louisville Metro has deep financial pockets. But for Trageser — who prevailed on all but the issue of penalties, costs, and attorney’s fees — the victory came at a cost he should not be forced to bear.”
Neither Louisville Metro nor Trageser appealed Judge Haner’s ruling.
In an unrelated — but equally preposterous — case, the Kentucky State University Foundation continued to squander public resources in defending its claim that its records are not subject to public scrutiny. It did so by appealing a Franklin Circuit Court opinion that reached the opposite conclusion to the Kentucky Court of Appeals.
A 1992 Kentucky Supreme Court opinion declaring that KSU’s Foundation is a public agency for open records purposes, a 2021 Attorney General’s open records decision affirming the 1992 opinion, and the challenged 2022 Franklin Circuit Court opinion — reaffirming both — repudiate the KSU Foundation’s position.
In a blog posted soon after the KSU Foundation appealed the Kentucky Attorney General’s decision to the Franklin Circuit Court, the Kentucky Open Government Coalition commented:
“Despite recent revelations concerning financial mismanagement at KSU, the admitted role KSU officials played in approving Foundation disbursements, and singularly damning optics, the Foundation will expend public funds to evade accountability.
“As KSU seeks a taxpayer bailout to rescue it from its current financial crisis, the tenuous claims advanced by its Foundation in support of secrecy must yield to the strongly substantiated public interest in its Foundation records requested by the State Journal.
“It was, after all, secrecy that got Kentucky State University in trouble to begin with.”
The Court of Appeals case has been briefed and oral argument is scheduled in early 2024.
10. The departing Attorney General leaves a dark open government legacy
Recently surfaced, and as yet unrefuted, claims that departing Attorney General Daniel Cameron abdicated his statutory duty to distribute open records and open meetings materials to some designated public officials — for mandatory training purposes — may represent the final affront to open government Cameron perpetrated in his four year term of office.
But in a May, 2023, post examining what fate might await Kentucky’s open government laws under a Cameron gubernatorial administration, the Coalition enumerated his chief offenses.
“Whether it was outrages to open government committed in the name of ‘strict’ statutory construction or reliance on aberrant legal authority, Daniel Cameron is to thank for, among other things:
• vastly expanding government secrecy in conducting the public’s business by declaring that public officials/employees’ communications about the public’s business on their personal devices and accounts are not public records;
• perpetuating law enforcement agencies’ erroneous belief that all records in an open criminal investigation are excluded from public inspection; and
• eviscerating open meetings laws by declaring that the requirements for conducting closed sessions during public meetings are mostly voluntary and that a quorum of the members of a public agency does not violate the open meetings law when they discuss public business by email.
“It has been a slow and painful ‘near-death by a thousand cuts’ in Cameron’s open records and meetings dispute ‘resolution’ — resolution that for decades proceeded from clear statements of legislative policy and judicial interpretation favoring public access.” Under Cameron, dispute resolution was often driven by personal preference rather than governing legal policy and precedent.
Kentucky’s open government laws may recover, but only through reasoned enforcement of longstanding interpretation, continued judicial review consistent with that interpretation, and a much-needed legislative “hands-off” approach. When that “hands-off” legislative approach is ignored — as it inevitably will be by lawmakers who cannot resist the temptation to leave their anti-open government mark — the laws’ salvation lies in united and vociferous bipartisan opposition to any proposal to amend the existing open records or open meetings laws that divests Kentuckians of their right to be informed what their government is doing.
Kentucky
Live updates: Trump to visit Massie’s district in Kentucky today
Thomas Massie recounts 2020 Trump threat during campaign kickoff
Rep. Thomas Massie, launching his 2026 campaign, remembers when President Donald Trump threatened him during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic.
President Donald Trump will be in the Bluegrass State on March 11, visiting a congressional district he’s had his eye on for some time.
Trump is set to speak at a Verst Logistics facility in Hebron, Kentucky, near Cincinnati. Doors to the event open at 1 p.m., with Trump expected to speak just before 5 p.m., according to information sent to registered guests.
The visit will take place in Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District, where U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie has built a loyal following since taking office in 2012.
That following is now being put to the test as Trump attempts to oust Massie from office, following months of public disagreements over Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” and America’s involvement in Iran. The pair’s feud hit a fever pitch in fall 2025, when the congressman helped lead the push for the release of millions of files related to the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein.
Trump personally courted Ed Gallrein to run against Massie in the Republican primary, endorsing the Navy SEAL even before he launched his campaign.
Trump is scheduled to stop by Thermo Fisher Scientific in the Cincinnati suburb of Reading before heading to Northern Kentucky.
Follow updates through the day below:
Traffic could be disrupted during Trump’s visit, with a spokesperson for the U.S. Secret Service saying residents and visitors near Hebron and Reading can expect “intermittent road closures and parking restrictions.”
Boone County Sheriff’s spokesman Lieutenant Anthony Theetge recommended motorists avoid the area near the event if possible.
Massie challenged primary opponent Gallrein to a debate and said Trump could moderate it, during a Campbell County Republican Committee meeting March 9, where he was the guest speaker.
Massie said he did not plan to attend Trump’s event in Northern Kentucky, according to reporting from the Cincinnati Enquirer, but he was “actually glad to see the president in our district and paying attention to local issues. I suspect he’s also going to try to help my opponent but that’s really all my opponent has going for him.”
A pre-program for Trump’s event in Hebron is scheduled to begin at 3 p.m., with remarks from Trump at 4:50 p.m., according to information sent to registered guests.
Trump is scheduled to make two stops in the Greater Cincinnati area on March 11.
He’ll first visit Thermo Fisher Scientific, a pharmaceutical and biotechnology company, in Reading, Ohio, to discuss TrumpRx.gov, a new prescription drug website.
Later, he’ll head to a Verst Logistics contract packaging facility in Hebron, Kentucky. The purpose of that visit was not disclosed in an invitation for the event.
Trump has been in Kentucky at least five times since he first campaigned for office in 2016. That year, he stopped at the Kentucky Exposition Center during his “Make America Great Again” campaign tour and returned two months later for a convention of the National Rifle Association.
He last visited the commonwealth in 2022 to attend the Kentucky Derby, where he received mixed reactions from those in the crowd.
Kentucky
Glendale, KY, residents mourn death of solider killed in Iran conflict
Gen. Caine honors Sgt. Benjamin Pennington
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine spoke to reporters about the seventh soldier killed in the Iran war, Sgt. Benjamin Pennington.
GLENDALE, Ky. – The text message arrived on Mike Bell’s phone early on March 1. It was brief: Benjamin Pennington, the son of Bell’s close friend Tim Pennington, had been seriously injured in an attack at a U.S. air base in Saudi Arabia.
Bell hadn’t seen Benjamin Pennington in a while, but the executive minister and retired pastor of Glendale Christian Church clearly remembered the bright, ambitious boy who attended church every Sunday with his parents before enlisting in the U.S. Army.
Bell asked the Sunday school students gathered before him to pray for the 26-year-old Glendale native. Over the following week, he and Tim talked or texted daily, praying and hoping for the best.
There were signs of hope on March 5. Pennington asked the medical staff for a Pepsi, which his family saw as a positive sign. But by March 7, Pennington’s condition had worsened.
That night, after calling a basketball game at Central Hardin High School, Bell received a call from Tim. Benjamin had died from his injuries.
Bell said Benjamin was about to be moved from Saudi Arabia to Germany when his blood pressure dropped.
Bell ached thinking about Pennington’s family not being able to be with Benjamin in his final moments.
“Their hurt is so real and so powerful. I can’t fathom the loss of their son,” Bell said. “That distance made a real difference.”
As the conflict between the U.S., Israel and Iran enters its second week, Glendale and the larger Hardin County community are now mourning one of their own. According to those who knew him best, Pennington was a well-liked, confident young man who made friends easily.
An Eagle Scout and high school athlete, Pennington was enrolled in an automotive technology career pathway at his alma mater, Central Hardin High School. However, he changed his career plans and joined the Army in 2017 right after graduating.
At the time of his death, Pennington was a sergeant assigned to the 1st Space Brigade at Fort Carson, Colorado. The U.S. Army said in a news release that Pennington will be posthumously promoted to staff sergeant.
Glendale is a typical small town — a Mayberry of today, as Bell likes to say. It’s quiet, with plenty of antique shops and family-owned restaurants lining its historic boulevard. Residents here take pride in how long they’ve lived here, and many have never dreamed of leaving the community they’ve built.
“I moved here 20 years ago, and I’m considered a young-in,” said Sherry Creek, owner of The Mercantile, a home goods store on East Main Street.
Some, like Eddie Best, trace their roots back to the 1800s. On March 10, Best was inside The Whistle Stop, a southern-style family restaurant that has only changed hands twice in its 50-year history. It was a Tuesday, which meant he was picking up his family’s regular order of two open-faced roast beef sandwiches, a side of greens and baked apples.
“Family, that’s why I stayed all these years,” said Best, 45.
The ties that bind this close-knit community make Pennington’s death even more impactful for the town of about 2,000 residents, located about an hour south of Louisville. In the few days since the news broke, Bell said his and others’ phones have been ringing nonstop.
“The people are wanting to know what to do, how to do,” Bell said. “Everybody is struggling in darkness, trying to figure out how to bring a little light to the Pennington family in their struggle and transition.”
The Penningtons, by all accounts, are active and involved community members. Tim Pennington has been a long-standing member of the town’s Lions Club and coaches cross country and track at Central Hardin High School.
Pennington was on the team while his father was the coach. Contrary to what some might expect, Pennington showed at least no outward annoyance at his dad being coach, said Jonathan Ratliff, who was also on the school’s team. If anything, he put twice as much effort into his sport, showing he wasn’t going to get favorable treatment, Ratliff said.
Ratliff, who was a few years ahead of Pennington at Central Hardin, said Pennington was friendly and funny, someone who quickly made friends with teammates and even athletes on different teams.
“As soon as I joined the team, it felt like I had been with him forever,” Ratliff, a part-time actor in the Glendale community, said. “It didn’t matter if you knew Ben for a minute or two years. He just had a positive energy to be around. Very fun guy, great teammate to have.”
Pennington’s death marks a second blow to Glendale in recent months. In December, Ford and the South Korean company SK On dissolved their partnership to manufacture electric vehicle batteries at a plant just outside of the town. Although Ford plans to retool the factory and hire 2,100 workers for its second phase, the immediate impact resulted in termination notices to 1,500 people.
“Nobody was indifferent on it,” Bell said of the plant. “And then you have this, and everybody hurts. … It’s a family.”
Pennington is the seventh U.S. service member to die in the conflict that began Feb. 28. The other six soldiers died in an Iranian missile strike at a civilian port in Kuwait one day after the war began. Military officials are investigating the circumstances of the March 1 attack at Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia.
Pennington received the Army Commendation Medal three times and the Army Good Conduct Medal twice during his military career, according to the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command. He also received the Army Achievement Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Overseas Service Ribbon, Noncommissioned Officer Professional Development Ribbon, Korea Defense Service Medal and the Army Service Ribbon.
On March 9, Pennington’s body was returned to U.S. soil. Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of Defense Peter Hegseth attended the dignified transfer ceremony at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, a military tradition.
It’s unclear when Pennington’s remains will return to Glendale, but the community is ready to welcome him home.
Hardin County Judge Executive Keith Taul has ordered all flags at Hardin County government buildings to be lowered from March 9 to sunset March 11 in honor of Pennington.
The Glendale community “will get through this, together,” Taul said. “They will. They’ll reach out and put their arms around the Pennington family for sure.”
Monroe Trombly covers public safety. He can be reached at mtrombly@gannett.com.
Kentucky
Trump takes his war against Thomas Massie straight to his home Kentucky district
WASHINGTON — President Trump will use his stop in Kentucky on Wednesday to try to get his congressional nemesis out of office.
His target is Rep. Thomas Massie, a seven-term congressman who the White House has named the “Democrats’ favorite member.”
Trump endorsed Massie’s primary opponent, Ed Gallrein, who will be at the event in Hebron, Ky., per his campaign. The president will also be making a stop in Ohio.
Hebron is located in Boone County, Ky., just south of Cincinnati.
The White House made its feelings on Massie clear.
“You can have differences, but you have to be constructive. He is not constructive. In fact, he’s the Democrats’ favorite member,” a senior administration official told The Post.
Massie has outraged the White House on multiple occasions: he refused to support Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill,” which was the president’s signature domestic policy agenda; he criticized Trump’s foreign policy and accused him of executive overreach on the attacks on drug boats and Iran; and he led the charge on demanding the Justice Department release all its files in the Jeffrey Epstein case.
Now Trump is going to Massie’s district along the Ohio River to campaign against him, with the primary election just a little more than two months away, on May 19th.
Massie won’t be there.

“Congressman Massie will not be attending as he has a previously scheduled official event,” his campaign told The Post.
Trump has railed against Massie as “the worst Republican.”
He took a swipe at his biggest naysayer when he spoke to House Republicans at their retreat at Trump Doral on Monday.
“The Republican Party has fantastic spirit, the level I don’t think has been seen before,” Trump said. “We have to get a couple of people on board, which at least one case is virtually impossible. I wonder who that might be, sick person.”
It’s believed he was talking about Massie, who was not seen in the audience.
In contrast, Gallrein, a former Navy SEAL, has praised Trump, his policies and his handling of the war in Iran.
For his part, Massie has been posting Trump’s videos and comments attacking him, hoping to turn the criticism from the president into support from voters.
The May primary will be a test of Trump’s power with Republican voters. It’ll also be seen as a barometer of Trump’s messaging on the economy.
The White House has argued the cost of living is down but rising gas prices – from the attack on Iran – have dominated the news. Still, the president will tout his work on the issue.
“President Trump will visit the great states of Ohio and Kentucky on Wednesday to tout his economic victories and detail his administration’s aggressive, ongoing efforts to lower prices and make America more affordable,” White House spokesperson Liz Huston told The Post.
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