News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Russellville man charged after allegedly stealing truck and returning it
SUMMARY: A Russellville man, Bradford Belcher, 46, faces multiple charges after reportedly stealing a truck. The Logan County Sheriff’s Office responded to a vehicle blocking Morgantown Road early Sunday. While en route, deputies were informed the truck was driving through fences and gates. Surveillance video showed Belcher stealing the truck and returning it with heavy front-end damage, likely from hitting an animal. Authorities found damage to an iron gate upon arrival. Belcher was detained, showing signs of being under the influence of a controlled substance. Charges include burglary, theft, trespassing, criminal mischief, and public intoxication. He remains in jail.
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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Man arrested after alleged strangulation of adult and juvenile
SUMMARY: In Bowling Green, Ky., Glennis Ligon, 32, was arrested following an alleged assault involving an adult and a juvenile victim. Police responded to a residence where the adult claimed Ligon assaulted both her and the juvenile amid an argument that escalated physically. The adult was choked and had her glasses knocked off, while the juvenile was also choked upstairs. During the altercation, the juvenile stabbed Ligon in the shoulder with a kitchen knife, after which Ligon was found outside with a stab wound. He was treated at TriStar Greenview Regional Hospital before being jailed and charged with strangulation, assault, and resisting arrest.
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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Trial of Brooks Houck, Joseph Lawson enters Day 7
SUMMARY: The seventh day of the Brooks Houck and Joseph Lawson trial is underway in Bowling Green, Kentucky. The defense called Rhonda McIlvoy, Houck’s sister, who testified about being accused and threatened following Crystal Rogers’ 2015 disappearance. Rogers’ body remains unfound. McIlvoy denied any involvement or knowledge of a family conspiracy related to Rogers’ disappearance. Prosecutors questioned her about illegally recording her grand jury testimony, suggesting it was part of a family effort to align stories. Three recording devices were found in the family home. News 40 continues to provide updates as the trial progresses.
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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
In small-town Kentucky, finding ‘all the more reason to resist’
by Guest columnist, Kentucky Lantern
July 2, 2025
At first I wasn’t sure we ought to go. It was easy to imagine several ways this thing could go off the rails. But pretty soon we got clear. If there was going to be an anti-Trump rally in Manchester, we were going to be there.
We’d watched the massive protests in cities and towns around the country, none of them close to our home in Clay County. This was our chance to participate. Edmund threw two folding lawn chairs in the trunk of the car. I brought the signs.
In a downtown parking lot, we found a small group of young people unpacking boxes of snacks and bottled water. We set up in a small grassy area right in the middle of town. Gradually, one at a time, others joined us, adults of varying ages, men and women, some from around here, others from nearby towns. I counted about two dozen on our side.
Meanwhile another group about the same size was gathering across the street. Much of the event turned out to be these two groups yelling at one another from across the road.
From our side we chanted:
No hate, no fear
Everyone is welcome here
Hey Hey Ho Ho
Donald Trump has got to go
We sang “This Land is Your Land ” and “Which Side Are You On?”
We held up signs:
Medicaid Cuts = Closed Hospitals
Hillbillies Need Health Care, Too
Trump Gives to the Rich, Takes from the Poor
We had chants, songs and signs. They had flags and trucks. They were gathered around a bright red pickup, parked as if aimed in our direction. There were other trucks, too, not parked, but in constant motion, driving past us up and down Main Street, Trump flags flying, going one way then turning around and coming back the other. It took us a few minutes to figure out that there weren’t as many trucks as there seemed to be, that we were seeing the same ones again and again. And again.
The trucks, already loud, revved up even louder as they passed us. Some of the people in the trucks got loud, too. Some yelled, GO HOME! To which some of us replied, “We ARE home.” Other truckers shouted something else, which sounded like “other truckers,” but which started with M as in mother and F as in father. I have heard this expression many times in my life, but never so much as last Friday night. It was appropriate, I guess, since earlier in the week the president himself had dropped the F-bomb in a public statement about dropping bombs in Iran. One woman in our group, when they yelled obscenities at us, answered, “We love you.”
Two drivers with diesel engines released clouds of black smoke on our group as they passed. They were promptly pursued and arrested by the police, along with a gentleman in Proud Boy gear who started across the street towards our group and was escorted away by a policeman.
The Manchester police did an amazing, effective and important job. They made it possible for all of us on both sides of the street to exercise our right to protest, and they kept us safe.
There’s another KY Resist protest rally July 5 in London. I plan on being there. It’s a risky business, because Donald Trump has purposefully turned up the dial on anger, hate, fear, and the possibility of violence.
Which is — Hey Hey Ho Ho — all the more reason to resist.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
Kentucky Lantern is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kentucky Lantern maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jamie Lucke for questions: info@kentuckylantern.com.
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Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Left-Leaning
This content highlights participation in an anti-Trump rally, featuring chants and signs critical of Donald Trump and his policies, such as Medicaid cuts and economic inequality. The tone is sympathetic to the protesters and emphasizes resistance against Trump’s rhetoric and actions. While it presents aspects of the opposing group, the language and framing clearly support left-wing activism and criticize right-wing elements, indicating a left-leaning perspective.
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