LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) -- The man who died when he was hit by a car while hanging on the outside of a vehicle has been identified. Officers were called to the area of South 4th Street and Winkler Avenue around 7 p.m. on a report that a person had been hit by a vehicle, Louisville Metro Police Spokesperson John Bradley said in a statement.
The 2022 shooting death of Omari Cryer by the U.S. Marshals Office during a joint arrest with Louisville police has prompted several allegations of wrongdoing from Louisville’s Metro Inspector General,
A Kentucky man who shot at Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg when he was a candidate in 2022 has been sentenced to 17 years and 6 months in federal prison.
An internal memo directed attorneys to notify leadership of consent decrees that were finalized within the last 90 days. Louisville's was finalized in that time.
A Kentucky congressman is voicing his concerns to the U.S. Department of Justice over Louisville's consent decree potentially being in jeopardy.
A Louisville woman filed a lawsuit against multiple Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) officers, and MetroSafe dispatchers following what she says was the agencies failure to respond to a domestic violence call.
One day after the Trump administration injected fresh uncertainty into the fate of Justice Department agreements aimed at reforming local police departments with histories of misconduct and abuse, city leaders in in Minneapolis and Louisville pledged to follow through with agreed-upon reforms no matter what.
It is our honor to be part of the 11,000 plus law enforcement members that represent the entire nation during this historical event,” LMPD said.
The previous administration’s Department of Justice and Louisville signed the agreement last month, but it has not yet been approved by a federal judge.
The union claims the reform-oversight deal negotiated by the feds and city violates a collective bargaining agreement. The ACLU intervenes.
A Kentucky woman is suing multiple Louisville police officers and emergency dispatchers, alleging they mishandled a 911 call for help — not showing up for hours — while her ex-boyfriend beat and threatened her in her apartment.
The lawsuit says that LMPD officers and MetroSafe emergency dispatchers neglected to adhere to mandatory domestic violence response protocols, a failure that directly contributed to Stukenborg sustaining life-threatening injuries. Shutterstock