Wednesday, June 19 2013 4:30 AM EDT2013-06-19 08:30:58 GMT
Fayette County Sheriff deputies are looking into a home invasion that happened Wednesday morning. According to 911 dispatchers, it happened at a home on Gatewood Road in Oak Hill at approximately 1 a.m.
Fayette County Sheriff deputies are looking into a home invasion that happened Wednesday morning. According to 911 dispatchers, it happened at a home on Gatewood Road in Oak Hill at approximately 1 a.m.
Tuesday, June 18 2013 11:17 PM EDT2013-06-19 03:17:54 GMT
It could be a tough summer for people looking to fire up the grill as beef prices have hit an all time high. Local consumers and businesses are having to make sacrifices and cut back on the amount of beef
It could be a tough summer for people looking to fire up the grill as beef prices have hit an all time high. Local consumers and businesses are having to make sacrifices and cut back on the amount of beef
A mentally disabled woman and her young child were enslaved for more than a year, denied food and threatened with a pet python and pit bills, and the woman was beaten and forced to get pain medication for her...
A mentally disabled woman charged with shoplifting a candy bar asked to be jailed because three people "had been mean to her" - then went on to tell authorities about her time spent in unfathomably cruel servitude, along...
Tuesday, June 18 2013 7:26 PM EDT2013-06-18 23:26:08 GMT
The Greenbrier classic is less than two weeks away and names of pros attending are still coming in. One big name was just added to the cast of golfers competing in the tournament. Bubba Watson, the
Another big name commits to Greenbrier Classic, Minor League Baseball starts up, NBA Finals and more.
The case against a man charged with shooting two women at a community college inside a Christiansburg mall is headed to a grand jury.
The case against a man charged with shooting two women at a community college inside a Christiansburg mall is headed to a grand jury.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -
West Virginia's four racetrack casinos want the Legislature to cut their taxes and fees as surrounding states increasingly compete for their gamblers.
A bill introduced Wednesday would also allow the four casinos to scale back racing operations to save money.
The measure would slash the annual fee casinos pay to host table games from $2.5 million to $1 million. The fees benefit senior citizen programs. The bill would offset the revenue drop by tapping the purse fund that pays race winners.
The state's share of table game proceeds would drop from 35 percent of gross receipts to 25 percent under the bill. That would have cut state revenues by $7.8 million during the last budget year.
The bill would also reduce the minimum number of racing days to 150.