Updated: 2:57 PM Watergate figure Jeb Stuart Magruder, who served as Pastor of Lexington's First Presbyterian Church in the 1990's, remains in serious condition in a Columbus, Ohio hospital.
Posted: 12:08 PM President Bush said Wednesday his hand-picked investigative panel has interesting suggestions on improving health care for those wounded in battle, but the White House said not to expect action right away.
Updated: 11:24 PM A man who worked with Lexington school children is now in trouble with the law for sending an obscene picture of himself through e-mail.
Updated: 2:51 PM Gov. Ernie Fletcher said Wednesday that he and lawmakers received a commitment from Peabody Energy that the St. Louis company would recommend building a $3 billion coal gasification plant in Kentucky if the state comes through with financial incentives.
Updated: 2:56 PM Federal officials are alerting airport security officers to look out for terrorists practicing to carry explosive components onto aircraft.
Updated: 3:07 PM Police and water rescue officials were able to pull a vehicle out of a Boone County Lake today after a teenage girl drove the car into the lake.
Updated: 10:46 AM A Senate panel is nearing a vote on a proposal to put tobacco under Food and Drug Administration regulation despite objections that such a move would only entrench the market position of the nation's No. 1 tobacco company.
Posted: 11:31 PM Joyce Crider vanished almost five years ago, now her family is putting up a 20 thousand dollar reward for anyone that can give police the location of her remains.
Updated: 2:53 AM New autopsy results are in, but the report says very little about what happened to an Alabama man who was last seen alive near a Super Eight Motel in Pikeville.
Updated: 7:55 AM When Kentucky's new sex offender law went into effect last October, Lexington police officers went door-to-door looking for convicted sex offenders. The law ruled that they could no longer live within 1,000 feet of a church, school, day care or a park with a pool. But now a Kentucky judge has ruled the law is unconstitutional.
Updated: 2:54 AM Police have now arrested one person and are looking for several others in connection with at least four burglaries in Jackson County alone.