Tennessee
Constitutional Republicans face state Registry complaints – Tennessee Lookout
A Goodlettsville man has filed a complaint against two Constitutional Republican groups claiming they failed to register as political action committees even though their activities reach a level requiring state disclosures.
Wes Duenkel, owner of a motorsports photography business, made a sworn complaint with the Tennessee Registry of Election Finance and Sumner County District Attorney Ray Whitley in late November 2023 saying the Sumner County Constitutional Republicans and their partner organization, the Tennessee Constitutional Republicans, are unregistered political action committees yet qualify as a “multicandidate political action committee,” making expenditures to support or oppose two or more candidates for public office or two or more measures in an election involving referendums. Duenkel contends in his sworn complaint he has been unable to find a political action committee disclosure or any financial disclosures even though they have been operating for well more than a year.
Duenkel said Tuesday his problem with the organizations is not so much with their political views, though he disagrees with them on many topics, but with their failure to follow rules.
“I think laws are in place for a reason,” Duenkel said, adding he served on a political action committee dealing with school funding and filed financial reports. “I think it’s my duty as a citizen to at least raise the question and raise the issue of, if some groups follow the law, we all follow the law.”
Judge rules Sumner County Election Commission suit against county commission can proceed
The Registry of Election Finance is scheduled to review the matter at its Jan. 23 meeting at the Tennessee Tower.
Duenkel’s filing presents documentation showing the Sumner County Constitutional Republicans chairman, Ken Riley, saying the group had been in existence for more than four years in April 2022. Since its inception, it has sent out requests for donations, saying it spends “an incredible amount of time working to advance conservatism,” designed and bought stickers and other merchandise and hired private investigators to vet candidates.
Sumner County Constitutional Republicans also endorsed Todd Kerr, Marie Mobley, Tracy Finegan, Timothy Crowder and Josh Graham for school board seats, Chris Spencer for state Senate District 18 and General Sessions Judge Russ Edwards in 2024 elections.
The group opposes Republican state Sen. Ferrell Haile, R-Gallatin, sending out mailers showing donations to his campaign from drug companies and medical groups.
In addition, the group “disavowed” Sumner County Mayor John Isbell after supporting him. “Dealing with lying politicians is tricky and we will do better going forward. John could careless [sic} about this,” a post by the group states.
Duenkel notes he believes the Sumner County and Tennessee Constitutional Republicans are county and state organizations but filed the complaint initially with the Sumner County District Attorney’s Office before sending it on to the Registry of Election Finance.
“Campaign finance law is supposed to keep those who fund campaign activities transparents, and citizens like myself want all groups like this to follow the law,” Duenkel said in his complaint.
Sumner County Constitutional Republicans gained more than a foothold in the county’s political landscape over the last few years, endorsing 14 of 17 county commissioners who won 2022 races, along with backing winning school board candidates, working to remove books from school libraries and pushing a vote to insert the words “Judeo-Christian” into a guiding document for the Sumner County Commission’s work.
The group’s Bible-based platform calls for establishing a Christian foundation for governing and halting growth and development in Sumner County, which is located just northeast of Davidson County. It supports impact fees to pay for growth and development, according to Facebook posts.
“We exist to defeat liberal, progressive and communist ideologies. We are NOT friends with these radicals and we aren’t interested in working with them or partnering with them,” the group says on its Facebook page. “Our country is being destroyed by these ideologies.”
The site is also critical of so-called RINOs (Republicans in name only), which it claims tried to have two school board candidates removed from the ballot before the Tennessee Republican Party approved them.
The Registry of Election Finance notified Riley of the complaint in late November and placed the matter on the board’s January agenda for a preliminary review. He did not respond to an email request for comment Tuesday.
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Tennessee
Cam Ward injury update: Titans QB out after shoulder injury vs. Jaguars
Jacksonville Jaguars vs. Tennessee Titans pre-game analysis, prediction
Florida Times-Union Jacksonville Jaguars beat reporter Demetrius Harvey breaks down what the team needs to do to beat the Tennessee Titans in Week 18.
Tennessee Titans quarterback and former Miami star Cam Ward exited the Week 18 game against the Jacksonville Jaguars with a shoulder injury, sustained during a first-quarter touchdown run at EverBank Stadium on Jan. 4.
The Titans initially listed Ward as questionable to return, before declaring him out late in the first quarter. Up until the injury, the rookie quarterback had appeared in every offensive snap during the regular season for last-place Tennessee.
While rounding right end and diving for the end zone, Ward absorbed a hard hit from Jaguars linebacker Foye Oluokun as he also struck the ground just inside the end zone pylon. The rush gave the Titans a short-lived 7-0 lead.
Ward entered the medical tent after the injury, and Tennessee medical staff subsequently escorted him to the locker room.
The rookie from Miami had completed 24 of 38 passes for 141 yards when the Titans played Jacksonville on Nov. 30, a 25-3 Jaguars win. At Miami, Ward was a finalist for the 2024 Heisman Trophy, which ultimately went to Colorado receiver/cornerback Travis Hunter, now with the Jaguars but also out due to injury.
Former Jaguars quarterback Brandon Allen entered the game in Ward’s place on the next series. The Jags drafted Allen in the sixth round (No. 201) in 2016, although he never appeared in a regular-season game for Jacksonville.
With a victory, the Jaguars would clinch the AFC South and a first-round home assignment for the playoffs. The Titans were eliminated from postseason contention weeks ago.
(This story has been updated to add new information.)
Tennessee
Acuff’s big night pushes Arkansas past Tennessee in SEC opener
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Conference play has a way of revealing what teams really are, and Arkansas fans it’s a positive omen for the rest of the season.
Behind a career-high 29 points from freshman guard Darius Acuff Jr., the Razorbacks opened league play Saturday with an 86-75 victory over Tennessee at Bud Walton Arena.
After starting 0-5 last season, but having to battle their way to a Sweet 16 spot, they showed it’s not the end of the world. Now everybody will see what happens when they start strong.
Arkansas improved to 11-3 overall and 1-0 in the SEC, snapping a short run of slow conference starts while giving the home crowd a reason to settle in for winter.
The Volunteers arrived with a reputation for toughness and efficiency, and they lived up to that billing early, trading baskets and refusing to let the Hogs separate.
Tennessee shot well most of the afternoon and stayed within reach even when Arkansas briefly surged in the first half.
The difference was not dominance but steadiness, especially when the game tightened late.
Arkansas leaned on balance, patience, and the calm of a freshman who played like he had been here before.
Acuff shot 9 of 16 from the field and knocked down the biggest shot of the day, a three-pointer with 2:09 left that pushed the Razorbacks’ lead to 79-68.
The basket came just as Tennessee threatened to turn a close game into a coin flip.
“I was just trying to make the right play,” Acuff said. “Coach tells us to be confident and take our shots with conviction.”
Arkansas finds rhythm late
That confidence spread.
Meleek Thomas added 18 points, Malique Ewin finished with 12, and Karter Knox chipped in 11 as Arkansas placed four players in double figures.
No single run blew the game open, but one stretch midway through the second half tilted the floor.
Arkansas used an 18-5 run over 6 minutes and 37 seconds to flip a five-point deficit into an eight-point lead.
During that stretch, Tennessee missed eight straight shots and managed only two field goals on its next ten attempts.
The Razorbacks did not rush offense or chase highlights.
They waited for good looks, attacked the rim, and trusted the whistle.
Arkansas shot 29 of 33 from the free-throw line, quietly building a cushion that Tennessee never fully erased.
The Volunteers made life difficult with efficient shooting, finishing at 49 percent from the floor.
Amari Evans led Tennessee with 17 points and did not miss a shot, going 7 for 7.
But free throws told a different story. Tennessee went 12 of 23 at the line, leaving points behind that mattered when possessions shrank.
“We stuck to the process,” Arkansas’ coach said. “We just kept competing and playing our game.”
Useful start to conference play
This was not a loud win, but it was a useful one. Arkansas didn’t overwhelm Tennessee with pace or pressure.
Instead, the Hogs won with composure, spacing, and an understanding of when to slow the game down.
That matters in a league where possessions tighten and whistles get louder in February.
The Razorbacks finished at 42 percent shooting overall, with Acuff the only Arkansas player above 50 percent from the floor.
They didn’tneed perfection. They needed reliability and got it.
The crowd of more than 19,000 saw a team comfortable being uncomfortable, a team that didn’t panic when Tennessee crept close.
That calm showed most clearly in Acuff, whose late three settled both the scoreboard and the building.
Arkansas has reached the Sweet 16 in four of the past five seasons, and this game looked like one that fits that blueprint:
- Balanced scoring.
- Free throws made.
- Mistakes absorbed without unraveling.
- The SEC does not reward flash in January.
- It rewards teams that handle moments.
- The Razorbacks handled this one.
Arkansas will travel to Ole Miss next, carrying a conference win that counts the same as any other but feels heavier because of how it was earned.
Tennessee returns home to face Texas, searching for answers that were more subtle than glaring.
Key takeaways
- Darius Acuff Jr.’s career-high 29 points included the decisive three late.
- Four Razorbacks scored in double figures, easing pressure throughout the game.
- Arkansas’ edge at the line separated two evenly matched teams.
Hogs Feed
Tennessee
Tennessee’s ‘Ink of Hope Act’ aims to help tattoo artists spot signs of human trafficking
CHEATHAM COUNTY, Tenn. (WKRN) – Plenty of new laws will go into effect for Tennessee on Jan. 1, 2026, ranging from protecting victims of domestic violence to giving tattoo artists a new tool to help people in danger.
The “Ink of Hope Act” aims to teach tattoo artists how to recognize certain symbols or “brands” and intervene on behalf of human trafficking victims without putting themselves at risk.
“I’ve wanted to tattoo since I was 8,” Blake Ohrt, the owner of Scout’s Honor Tattoo in Ashland City, told News 2. “I watched somebody when I was really young get a tattoo, and I’ve been super fascinated by it… I just worked really hard my whole life and ended up here.”
Ohrt’s dream for as long as he could remember was to open his own tattoo shop, and now that business is about to celebrate its first anniversary.
“I really hope that people are taking the time and really figuring out who they want to get tattooed by, and maybe doing a little research, making sure that the style is compatible with what you’re wanting to do,” Ohrt said.
However, not everyone who sits in his chair seems willing. He has seen this firsthand a few times.
“People will attempt to set something up for someone else or come in as a pair, and one does the talking and one does not,” Ohrt explained. “Maybe even getting a name of that person and not, you know, I’m not much hearing from the person who’s going to be tattooed.”
When he learned about the “Ink of Hope Act,” he felt it could make a difference.
“Maybe some things that we can catch, like certain specific symbols or maybe placements or things like that, but really, it’s been super big for us,” Ohrt said.
This legislation will require tattoo artists looking to renew their licenses after Jan. 1, 2026, as well as those receiving their first licenses after that date, to watch a one-hour course offered by an approved nonprofit that focuses on human trafficking. Artists who fail to complete that training by Dec. 31, 2028, will have their licenses invalidated until they comply with the law.
“We have to take extra accountability for that and make sure that we’re also consenting for them, so hopefully everybody takes it seriously,” Ohrt told News 2.
For the employees of this Ashland City tattoo shop, it’s their “scout’s honor” to keep the promise to look out for anyone who sits in their chairs.
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