Friday, June 14 2013 10:12 AM EDT2013-06-14 14:12:26 GMT
A $500 fine and up to a year in jail, that's what the 14-year-old who was arrested after refusing to change his NRA shirt could face, following his arraignment today.
A $500 fine and up to a year in jail, that's the penalty that 14-year-old Jared Marcum, who was arrested after refusing to change his NRA shirt, could face, now that a judge has allowed the prosecution to move forward with it's obstructing an officer charge against him.
Tuesday, June 18 2013 6:03 PM EDT2013-06-18 22:03:22 GMT
A woman on Huntington's south side had a close encounter with a man who walked right up to the door of the home she was watching and insisted that he had to come inside to fix something, according to police.
A woman on Huntington's south side had a close encounter with a man who walked right up to the door of the home she was watching and insisted that he had to come inside to fix something, according to police.
Tuesday, June 18 2013 11:31 PM EDT2013-06-19 03:31:52 GMT
According to wv150.com, West Virginia's history will be brought to life with a three-dimensional film projected directly onto the face of the State Capitol. The shows will be Thursday, Friday, and Saturday,
The shows will be Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, beginning at 10 p.m.
MADISON -
Timothy Parsons admitted Tuesday to cutting the throats of his wife and mother-in-law last May.
Parsons, 39, took responsibility for the killings for the first time in the Boone County courtroom. It was part of a plea deal struck with prosecutors. Charges of sexual assault and kidnapping were dropped as a part of the deal.
Parsons is charged with killing Gloria Kinder, Parson's mother-in-law, and his wife Leigh Anne Kinder-Parsons in their Bloomingrose home using a knife. Police allege the fight began with Kinder-Parsons over money.
"You will see there was absolutely no mercy shown to either one of these victims," said Boone County Prosecutor Keith Randolph.
Parsons is scheduled to be sentenced May 1. Randolph expects those hearings to last all day while the prosecuting lays out in detail their case for life sentences without the possibility of parole.