A judge in Washington, D.C., has agreed to delay the bench trial of Nathan Earl Hughes.
Debra Hale-Shelton
Debra Hale-Shelton reports for the Arkansas Times. She has previously worked for The Associated Press and the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. A Marked Treean by birth, a Chicagoan by choice, she now lives in Conway.
Couple who bribed state lawmakers in behavioral health scandal must pay $4 million to government
The order includes a breakdown with details on just how much bribe money was paid to former Sen. Jeremy Hutchinson.
Tontitown man arrested in Jan. 6 riots
Camden is charged with felony offenses of assaulting, resisting or impeding certain officers and civil disorder, along with several misdemeanors.
Searcy man reaches plea agreement in Jan. 6 riots
Sentencing for Daniel Hatcher and two co-defendants, both from Texas, was set for Nov. 19.
Will Supreme Court’s Jan. 6 ruling affect ‘Bigo’ Barnett’s prison sentence?
Despite a celebratory tweet from Barnett, it’s not known yet if the ruling will lead to his early release from prison.
Supreme Court abortion punt not much of a victory for women’s health care
The U.S. Supreme Court decided Thursday not to take up an important case on a woman’s right to abortion care in a medical emergency. Arkansans can support a ballot issue to give women that right.
Supreme Court declines to review Josh Duggar’s child-porn conviction
Duggar, whose family starred in “19 Kids and Counting,” isn’t scheduled for release from prison until October 2032.
Searcy man charged in Capitol riots set for plea-agreement hearing
Daniel Hatcher of Searcy and two co-defendants in the Capitol riots are scheduled for a plea agreement hearing next week.
Richard “Bigo” Barnett seeks release from prison during appeal
Arkansan Richard Barnett’s attorney said the Gravette man is no flight risk and should be released from prison pending an appeal.
State officials distance themselves from Conway superintendent’s job training cuts
Conway School District Superintendent Jeff Collum’s email notifying two smaller districts of career-education cuts prompted state officials to declare they had nothing to do with it.