RM2RT1081–Eastern Kentucky University students (from left) Kayla Stephens of Greenup, Adrienne Keagle of Newport and Paul Shamhart of Lexington watch television as President George W. Bush speaks live from the Oval Office regarding terrorist attacks taking place earlier in the day on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2001 in Richmond, Madison County, KY, USA. 'Today, our fellow citizens, our way of life, our very freedom, came under attack in a series of deliberate and deadly terrorist acts,' Bush said of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in his televised address to the nation. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RT1080–Eastern Kentucky University students (from left) Kayla Stephens of Greenup, Adrienne Keagle of Newport and Paul Shamhart of Lexington watch television as President George W. Bush speaks live from the Oval Office regarding terrorist attacks taking place earlier in the day on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2001 in Richmond, Madison County, KY, USA. 'Today, our fellow citizens, our way of life, our very freedom, came under attack in a series of deliberate and deadly terrorist acts,' Bush said of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in his televised address to the nation. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RH1RXX–A pair of geese meander alongside North Elkhorn Creek on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014 in Georgetown, Scott County, KY, USA. A cloudy morning turned into a fair afternoon with a high temperature of 81 degrees Fahrenheit and low of 61, both slightly below the historic average temperatures for the day. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RH1RXY–A pair of geese meander alongside North Elkhorn Creek on Friday, Aug. 15, 2014 in Georgetown, Scott County, KY, USA. A cloudy morning turned into a fair afternoon with a high temperature of 81 degrees Fahrenheit and low of 61, both slightly below the historic average temperatures for the day. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RGM15N–President Bill Clinton promotes his proposed 'patients' bill of rights' legislation during a visit to Kentucky on Monday, Aug. 10, 1998 at the Commonwealth Convention Center in Louisville, Jefferson County, KY, USA. Clinton attended a fundraiser luncheon for Democratic congressional candidate Scotty Baesler later in the day. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RGM15H–President Bill Clinton (from left), Kentucky Gov. Paul Patton and Louisville Mayor Jerry Abramson bow their heads and observe a moment of silence in honor of 224 people killed in the Aug. 7 terrorist bombings of two United States embassies in East Africa on Monday, Aug. 10, 1998 at the Commonwealth Convention Center in Louisville, Jefferson County, KY, USA. 'We will do whatever we can to bring the murderers to justice,' Clinton said of the embassy bombings in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RGM15F–Gov. Paul Patton talks about healthcare in the state of Kentucky during a visit by President Bill Clinton on Monday, Aug. 10, 1998 at the Commonwealth Convention Center in Louisville, Jefferson County, KY, USA. The president visited Kentucky to promote his proposed 'patients' bill of rights' legislation and campaign for Democratic congressional candidate Scotty Baesler. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RGM170–Veteran TIME magazine photojournalist Dirck Halstead photographs President Bill Clinton as part of the traveling White House press pool on Monday, Aug. 10, 1998 at the Commonwealth Convention Center in Louisville, Jefferson County, KY, USA. Louisville was on the first leg of a scheduled three-day trip by the president which ended up being cut short a day due to the Aug. 7 terrorist bombings of two United States embassies in East Africa. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RGM15Y–President Bill Clinton (left) promotes his proposed 'patients' bill of rights' legislation as retiring Kentucky Sen. Wendell H. Ford (right) and an unidentified woman look on during a visit to Kentucky on Monday, Aug. 10, 1998 at the Commonwealth Convention Center in Louisville, Jefferson County, KY, USA. Clinton attended a fundraiser luncheon for Democratic congressional candidate Scotty Baesler later in the day. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RGM162–President Bill Clinton shakes hands with attendees while flanked by United States Secret Service agents after explaining his 'patients' bill of rights' initiative on Monday, Aug. 10, 1998 at the Commonwealth Convention Center in Louisville, Jefferson County, KY, USA. Clinton said the proposed legislation would help protect the confidentiality of people's personal medical details, among other things. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RGF2MK–Fruit of the Loom Inc. operational headquarters, seen here on Sunday, Aug. 9, 1998 in Bowling Green, Warren County, KY, USA. One of the world's largest manufacturers of underwear, T-shirts and activewear with brands including Fruit of the Loom, BVD, Gitano and Munsingwear, Fruit of the Loom closed 11 U.S. plants and laid off more than 7,000 workers in 1997, followed by laying off another 812 workers and closing its Campbellsville, KY, textile and apparel plant in June 1998; approximately 100 Campbellsville employees were offered jobs in Jamestown, KY. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RGB0FB–Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear waves to the crowd with his wife, first lady Britainy Beshear, by his side at the 143rd St. Jerome Fancy Farm Picnic on Saturday, Aug. 5, 2023 in Fancy Farm, Graves County, KY, USA. Incumbent Democrat Beshear is seeking a second term as governor of the Commonwealth of Kentucky against Republican nominee Daniel Cameron. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RG815R–The Simon Kenton Memorial Bridge over the Ohio River, seen here on Sunday, Aug. 8, 1999 in Maysville, Mason County, KY, USA. Opened to traffic on Nov. 25, 1931, the 1,991-foot long suspension bridge with a 1,060-foot main span carries U.S. Highway 62 across the Ohio River between Maysville, KY, and Aberdeen, OH. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RGB0TP–Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, 81, reflects while sitting on stage at the 143rd St. Jerome Fancy Farm Picnic on Saturday, Aug. 5, 2023 in Fancy Farm, Graves County, KY, USA. McConnell's trip to Western Kentucky for the state's annual premier political event was one of his first public appearances since freezing mid-sentence while speaking during a news conference in Washington on July 26, an event which has fueled speculation about the health and wellbeing of Kentucky's senior senator and longest-serving party leader in United States history. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RFERAK–Gymnast Vanessa Atler practices her balance beam routine before the USA Gymnastics National Championships on Saturday, Aug. 28, 1999 at Arco Arena in Sacramento, Sacramento County, CA, USA. Atler received first place in both the beam and vault categories of the senior women's event finals. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Joe Jaszewski)
RM2RFF8NA–Actor Bob Newhart, 78, poses for a portrait as 'Judson' from The Librarian film franchise on Wednesday, March 26, 2008 in New Orleans, Orleans Parish, LA, USA, in this publicity photo released by Turner Network Television. The Librarian: Curse of the Judas Chalice, the third film of the franchise, premieres Dec. 7, 2008 on TNT. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Mark Hill/TNT)
RM2RFEDG3–Lunchtime customers await their food on Friday, Aug. 3, 2018 at Ferrell's Snappy Service in Madisonville, Hopkins County, KY, USA. The small, 24-hour Madisonville diner opened by the Ferrell family in Kentucky in the late 1940s is the second-oldest remaining Ferrell's location behind Hopkinsville, which opened in 1936. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2REXG4J–Carnival-goers retreat to their vehicles as a heavy thunderstorm rolls in on Saturday, July 30, 2020 at Towne Square Mall in Owensboro, Daviess County, KY, USA. Total rain accumulation for the day was approximately 1.9 inches. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RDK07Y–NASA employees tow space shuttle Atlantis from the Shuttle Landing Facility to an orbiter processing facility at the Kennedy Space Center for the final time after completing mission STS-135 on Thursday, July 21, 2011 in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. Atlantis has spent a total of 307 days in space, orbited the Earth 4,848 times and traveled 125,935,769 miles since first being pressed into service in 1985. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Kim Shiflett/NASA)
RM2RDK058–Contrails follow NASA's space shuttle Atlantis as it descends toward Runway 15 at Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility for the final time on Thursday, July 21, 2011 in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. STS-135 was the final mission for both the Atlantis orbiter and the 30-year-old space shuttle program. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Sandra Joseph & Kevin O'Connell/NASA)
RM2RDK0H8–Space shuttle Atlantis pilot Doug Hurley (center) shakes hands with Commander Chris Ferguson (right) as mission specialist Sandy Magnus looks on following their return from mission STS-135 on Thursday, July 21, 2011 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. STS-135 was the final mission for both the Atlantis orbiter and the 30-year-old space shuttle program. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Kim Shiflett/NASA)
RM2RDK0HK–Space shuttle Atlantis crew members (from left) commander Chris Ferguson of Philadelphia, Pa., mission specialist Sandy Magnus of Belleville, Ill., pilot Doug Hurley of Endicott, N.Y., and mission specialist Rex Walheim of Redwood City, Calif., posed for a group photo in front of the orbiter after completing mission STS-135 on Thursday, July 21, 2011 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. STS-135 was the final mission for both the Atlantis orbiter and the 30-year-old space shuttle program. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Kim Shiflett/NASA)
RM2RDK06N–Contrails follow NASA's space shuttle Atlantis as it descends toward Runway 15 at Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility for the final time on Thursday, July 21, 2011 in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. STS-135 was the final mission for both the Atlantis orbiter and the 30-year-old space shuttle program. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Sandra Joseph & Kevin O'Connell/NASA)
RM2RDK06X–NASA's space shuttle Atlantis lands on Runway 15 at Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility for the final time on Thursday, July 21, 2011 in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. STS-135 was the final mission for both the Atlantis orbiter and the 30-year-old space shuttle program. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Kim Shiflett/NASA)
RM2RDK0BM–NASA employees tow space shuttle Atlantis from the Shuttle Landing Facility to an orbiter processing facility at the Kennedy Space Center for the final time after completing mission STS-135 on Thursday, July 21, 2011 in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. Atlantis has spent a total of 307 days in space, orbited the Earth 4,848 times and traveled 125,935,769 miles since first being pressed into service in 1985. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Kim Shiflett/NASA)
RM2RDK07G–NASA employees tow space shuttle Atlantis from the Shuttle Landing Facility to an orbiter processing facility at the Kennedy Space Center for the final time after completing mission STS-135 on Thursday, July 21, 2011 in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. Atlantis has spent a total of 307 days in space, orbited the Earth 4,848 times and traveled 125,935,769 miles since first being pressed into service in 1985. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Kim Shiflett/NASA)
RM2RDK0G0–NASA employees tow space shuttle Atlantis from the Shuttle Landing Facility to an orbiter processing facility at the Kennedy Space Center for the final time after completing mission STS-135 on Thursday, July 21, 2011 in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. Atlantis has spent a total of 307 days in space, orbited the Earth 4,848 times and traveled 125,935,769 miles since first being pressed into service in 1985. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Kim Shiflett/NASA)
RM2RDK077–Space shuttle orbiter Atlantis lands on Runway 15 at the Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility for the final time on Thursday, July 21, 2011 in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. Atlantis touched down at 5:57 a.m. EDT, bringing to a close both mission STS-135 and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's 30-year-old space shuttle program. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Tom Farrar & Tony Gray/NASA)
RM2RDK0HD–National Aeronautics and Space Administration astronauts (from left) commander Chris Ferguson of Philadelphia, PA, mission specialist Sandy Magnus of Belleville, IL, pilot Doug Hurley of Endicott, NY, and mission specialist Rex Walheim of Redwood City, CA, pose for a group photo in front of the space shuttle orbiter Atlantis after completing mission STS-135 on Thursday, July 21, 2011 at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. STS-135 was the final mission of NASA's 30-year-old space shuttle program. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Kim Shiflett/NASA)
RM2RDK04W–Space shuttle orbiter Atlantis streaks across the predawn sky as it descends for a landing at the Shuttle Landing Facility at Kennedy Space Center on Thursday, July 21, 2011 in Cape Canaveral, Brevard County, FL, USA. Atlantis touched down at 5:57 a.m. EDT, bringing to a close both mission STS-135 and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's 30-year-old space shuttle program. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RDCDFF–Early morning fog surrounds the grave of former Russell Springs Police Department Chief Danny Lee Luttrell on Wednesday, July 20, 2005 at South Fork Baptist Church Cemetery near Phil, Casey County, KY, USA. Luttrell served on the department from 1981 until his death from cancer in 1996. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RDBBG1–Angie Hale (right) has 13 inches of her hair cut off to donate to the Locks of Love program on Wednesday, July 20, 2005 at The Hair Affair in Russell Springs, Russell County, KY, USA. Established in 1997, Locks of Love is a nonprofit organization that creates prosthetic hairpieces for children suffering from medical hair loss. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RDBBH4–Angie Hale (right) has 13 inches of her hair cut off to donate to the Locks of Love program on Wednesday, July 20, 2005 at The Hair Affair in Russell Springs, Russell County, KY, USA. Established in 1997, Locks of Love is a nonprofit organization that creates prosthetic hairpieces for children suffering from medical hair loss. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RD6N4H–Biloxi Police Department officers search a vehicle in the White Pillars Restaurant and Lounge parking lot at 1696 Beach Blvd. while investigating the alleged theft of a vehicle registration tag on Monday, July 19, 2021 in Biloxi, Harrison County, MS, USA. The Biloxi Police Department is comprised of 128 sworn officers and 50 civilian employees operating on an annual budget of approximately $16 million, according to department records. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RD6N4G–Biloxi Police Department officers search a vehicle in the White Pillars Restaurant and Lounge parking lot at 1696 Beach Blvd. while investigating the alleged theft of a vehicle registration tag on Monday, July 19, 2021 in Biloxi, Harrison County, MS, USA. The Biloxi Police Department is comprised of 128 sworn officers and 50 civilian employees operating on an annual budget of approximately $16 million, according to department records. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RD6N4C–Biloxi Police Department officers search a vehicle in the White Pillars Restaurant and Lounge parking lot at 1696 Beach Blvd. while investigating the alleged theft of a vehicle registration tag on Monday, July 19, 2021 in Biloxi, Harrison County, MS, USA. The Biloxi Police Department is comprised of 128 sworn officers and 50 civilian employees operating on an annual budget of approximately $16 million, according to department records. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT5NY–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT5G8–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT5RM–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT4R4–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT5DF–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT5CN–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT56F–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT4Y3–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT5B4–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT5KY–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCT5KB–The Sun Herald newspaper building at 205 DeBuys Rd. sets empty on Saturday, July 17, 2021 in Gulfport, Harrison County, MS, USA. Built in 1970, the nearly 87,000-square-foot building set on more than 18 acres and nicknamed 'Fort Weeks' after a former publisher, survived Hurricane Katrina — after which the Sun Herald received a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage — but couldn't survive acquisition by The McClatchy Company, which finished moving the newspaper's offices to a smaller, more 'cost-efficient' location in downtown Gulfport in mid-April, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCG7A0–Fresh brown Gulf shrimp from Ocean Seafood Market in Biloxi are styled in a colander for a posed photograph on Thursday, July 15, 2021 in D'Iberville, Harrison County, MS, USA. Mississippi's shrimping industry continues to decline with only 375 commercial shrimping licenses issued this year, according to Mississippi Department of Marine Resources records, down from 449 in 2019, 713 in 2009 and 1,694 in 1999. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RCG648–Defendant Gary Casper McKinney, 31, listens as a Pulaski Circuit Court jury hands down three death sentences for the 1995 murder of his newlywed wife and her two young children during his murder trial on Thursday, July 16, 1998 in Somerset, Pulaski County, KY, USA. McKinney was convicted on three counts of murder, three counts of abuse of a corpse, arson and evidence tampering after nearly two weeks in court. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RBE7B5–An unidentified man and woman watch as flames erupt from the back of a two-story house at 1006 Fontaine Rd. on the border between the Ashland Park and Chevy Chase neighborhoods on Sunday, July 10, 2016 in Lexington, Fayette County, KY, USA. No injuries were reported and the cause of the fire has not yet been determined. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RBE7CH–An unidentified woman walks away as flames erupt from the back of a two-story house at 1006 Fontaine Rd. on the border between the Ashland Park and Chevy Chase neighborhoods on Sunday, July 10, 2016 in Lexington, Fayette County, KY, USA. No injuries were reported and the cause of the fire has not yet been determined. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KFE–'Back the Blue' and an illustration of a police badge adorn a wreath hanging near the patrol vehicle of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KE8–'Back the Blue' and an illustration of a police badge adorn a wreath hanging near the patrol vehicle of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KGA–Flags fly at half-staff outside the Tell City Police Department on Thursday, July 6, 2023 in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Tell City Police Sgt. Heather J. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect on July 3 at a local hospital, the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KH2–Flags fly at half-staff outside the Tell City Police Department on Thursday, July 6, 2023 in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Tell City Police Sgt. Heather J. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect on July 3 at a local hospital, the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KH6–'Tell City' painted on a bright red water tower resembling an apple and overlooking downtown welcomes visitors to the southern Indiana city named for William Tell on Thursday, July 6, 2023 in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. The county seat of Perry County and located approximately 150 miles south of Indianapolis in Troy Township, Tell City was founded in 1858 as a place where Swiss-German immigrants — mostly mechanics, shopkeepers, factory workers and small farmers — could live in harmony and obtain affordable homesteads. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KGK–An Indiana state flag flies at half-staff outside the Tell City Police Department on Thursday, July 6, 2023 in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Tell City Police Sgt. Heather J. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect on July 3 at a local hospital, the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KD2–A photograph of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn leans against the front of her Dodge Durango patrol vehicle with memorial tributes piled around it on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KD9–A photograph of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn leans against the front of her Dodge Durango patrol vehicle with memorial tributes piled around it on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KHF–A sign marks the entrance to Perry County Memorial Hospital on Thursday, July 6, 2023 in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect inside the hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KBA–A pair of visitors examine flowers and memorial tributes piled on and around the Dodge Durango patrol vehicle of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KFT–A handwritten tribute to Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn in the shape of a cat and referencing her badge number adorns the bumper of her patrol vehicle on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KB3–A Tell City Police Department sign adorns the outside of the Mozart Street police station on Thursday, July 6, 2023 in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Tell City Police Sgt. Heather J. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KCX–Flowers and memorial tributes are piled alongside the Dodge Durango patrol vehicle of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KCP–A pair of visitors examine flowers and memorial tributes piled on and around the Dodge Durango patrol vehicle of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KAN–An unidentified man walks into the Tell City Police Department carrying a hard-sided equipment case on Thursday, July 6, 2023 in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KDH–Flowers and memorial tributes are piled alongside the Dodge Durango patrol vehicle of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KDP–Memorial flower arrangements adorn the driver's side doors of the Dodge Durango patrol vehicle of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KE0–Flowers and memorial tributes are piled alongside the Dodge Durango patrol vehicle of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn on Thursday, July 6, 2023 near city hall in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RB3KE4–A child's drawing of a police vehicle is taped to a door of the Dodge Durango patrol vehicle of Tell City Police Department Sgt. Heather J. Glenn alongside a bouquet of red roses on Thursday, July 6, 2023 in Tell City, Troy Township, Perry County, IN, USA. Glenn, 47, was shot and killed July 3 while trying to arrest a domestic violence suspect at a local hospital, becoming the first line-of-duty death in the Tell City Police Department's nearly 165-year history and second Indiana police officer to be killed in the line of duty in less than a week. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RAG8XG–Gary O'connell (right) and his wife, Diane O'connell, of Dayton, OH, watch a burst of fireworks exploding over Monument Square and a Spirit of the American Doughboy statue during the Lakefest Fourth of July Celebration on Saturday, July 3, 1999 in Jamestown, Russell County, KY, USA. Mr. O'connell said the family owns a cabin on Lake Cumberland and has been vacationing in Russell County for many years. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RACGA1–David Frizzell, 57, performs during the Lakefest Fourth of July Celebration on Saturday, July 3, 1999 in Jamestown, Russell County, KY, USA. The younger brother of country singer-songwriter Lefty Frizzell and a native of El Dorado, AR, David Frizzell is perhaps best known for charting two number-one singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in the 1980s: the 1981 Shelly West duet 'You're the Reason God Made Oklahoma' and the 1982 solo hit 'I'm Gonna Hire a Wino to Decorate Our Home.' (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RACGB8–David Frizzell, 57, performs during the Lakefest Fourth of July Celebration on Saturday, July 3, 1999 in Jamestown, Russell County, KY, USA. The younger brother of country singer-songwriter Lefty Frizzell and a native of El Dorado, AR, David Frizzell is perhaps best known for charting two number-one singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in the 1980s: the 1981 Shelly West duet 'You're the Reason God Made Oklahoma' and the 1982 solo hit 'I'm Gonna Hire a Wino to Decorate Our Home.' (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RACGA2–David Frizzell, 57, performs during the Lakefest Fourth of July Celebration on Saturday, July 3, 1999 in Jamestown, Russell County, KY, USA. The younger brother of country singer-songwriter Lefty Frizzell and a native of El Dorado, AR, David Frizzell is perhaps best known for charting two number-one singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in the 1980s: the 1981 Shelly West duet 'You're the Reason God Made Oklahoma' and the 1982 solo hit 'I'm Gonna Hire a Wino to Decorate Our Home.' (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RACGA3–David Frizzell, 57, performs during the Lakefest Fourth of July Celebration on Saturday, July 3, 1999 in Jamestown, Russell County, KY, USA. The younger brother of country singer-songwriter Lefty Frizzell and a native of El Dorado, AR, David Frizzell is perhaps best known for charting two number-one singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in the 1980s: the 1981 Shelly West duet 'You're the Reason God Made Oklahoma' and the 1982 solo hit 'I'm Gonna Hire a Wino to Decorate Our Home.' (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RACGA7–An unidentified drummer performs with David Frizzell during the Lakefest Fourth of July Celebration on Saturday, July 3, 1999 in Jamestown, Russell County, KY, USA. Frizzell is perhaps best known for charting two number-one singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in the 1980s: the 1981 Shelly West duet 'You're the Reason God Made Oklahoma' and the 1982 solo hit 'I'm Gonna Hire a Wino to Decorate Our Home.' (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2RAG8XH–Gary O'connell (right) and his wife, Diane O'connell, of Dayton, OH, watch a burst of fireworks exploding over Monument Square and a Spirit of the American Doughboy statue during the Lakefest Fourth of July Celebration on Saturday, July 3, 1999 in Jamestown, Russell County, KY, USA. Mr. O'connell said the family owns a cabin on Lake Cumberland and has been vacationing in Russell County for many years. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2R93KGE–Danny Rogers (left) and local striper fishing guide Odford Reese Jr. share a laugh outside Lake Country BP as Reese stops to pick up bags of ice on his way to Jamestown Marina for one of his daily chartered fishing excursions on Lake Cumberland on Saturday, June 23, 2007 in Russell Springs, Russell County, KY, USA. Typically styled as 'Col. O. Reese,' Reese was a U.S. Army veteran, Kentucky Colonel and retired park ranger who operated the Big 'O' Fish fishing charter service on Lake Cumberland for decades. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2R94AMG–Current fuel prices for diesel and regular unleaded gasoline are displayed on a gas station awning amid an empty parking lot on Wednesday, June 24, 2020 at the Speedy Mart convenience store in Falls of Rough, Grayson County, KY, USA. The rate at which gas prices are increasing across the country is slowing, according to a report released by the American Automobile Association, with the national average cost of a gallon of unleaded gasoline increasing by three cents to $2.13 for the week ended June 22, 2020. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2R8MFT7–Lake Cumberland's dramatically reduced water level reveals the bottom of the channel running beneath the Greasy Creek bridge on U.S. Highway 127 on Thursday, June 21, 2007 in Jamestown, Russell County, KY, USA. Staining on the bridge pillars highlights water levels that were more typical prior to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' commencement of the Wolf Creek Dam Rehabilitation Project in March 2006; the dam seepage remediation project entered its second phase in January 2007 and is projected to run several more years. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2R8MFT8–Lake Cumberland's dramatically reduced water level necessitated by the Wolf Creek Dam Rehabilitation Project reveals the bottom of the Greasy Creek channel on Thursday, June 21, 2007 in Jamestown, Russell County, KY, USA. Annual water levels in Lake Cumberland typically fluctuate between 723 and 760 feet above sea level based on precipitation and hydroelectric production requirements, with a normal summer pool elevation of 723 feet; the lake was drawn down to 680 feet for the dam seepage remediation project, which entered its second phase in January 2007. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2R6REAR–Owensboro, Kentucky, USA. 10 Jun 2023. Mandolin player Chris Luquette (left) takes a bow as (from left) Rick Faris, Will McSeveney and Jim Bob Faris share a laugh on stage during an album release party in the Woodward Theatre at the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame & Museum. Rick Faris is a Grammy-nominated bluegrass musician who was crowned 2022 New Artist of the Year by the International Bluegrass Music Association and just released his third album on Dark Shadow Recording over the weekend, titled 'Uncommon Sky.' (Credit: Billy Suratt/Apex MediaWire via Alamy Live News)
RM2R6REAK–Owensboro, Kentucky, USA. 10 Jun 2023. Rick Faris (2nd from left) and band members Chris Luquette on mandolin (left), Jim Bob Faris on upright bass (2nd from right) and Will McSeveney on banjo (right) perform during an album release party in the Woodward Theatre at the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame & Museum. A Grammy-nominated bluegrass artist who was crowned 2022 New Artist of the Year by the International Bluegrass Music Association, Rick Faris released his third album on Dark Shadow Recording over the weekend, titled 'Uncommon Sky.' (Credit: Billy Suratt/Apex MediaWire via Alamy Live News)
RM2R69W00–A driver waits while recharging the battery unit of his BMW electric vehicle at a four-unit Electrify America direct current EV charging station on Wednesday, June 7, 2023 at the National Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, Warren County, KY, USA. A subsidiary of Volkswagen Group of America, Electrify America was established in 2016 and currently operates a network of more than 788 electric vehicle charging locations in the United States, including four in the state of Kentucky. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)
RM2R69W04–A four-unit Electrify America direct current electric vehicle charging station sits idle on Wednesday, June 7, 2023 at the National Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, Warren County, KY, USA. A subsidiary of Volkswagen Group of America, Electrify America was established in 2016 and currently operates a network of more than 788 electric vehicle charging locations in the United States, including four in the state of Kentucky. (Apex MediaWire Photo by Billy Suratt)