Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey is offering unwavering support for President Donald Trump’s immigration plans as deportations take effect across the state and country. “We’re certainly taking the lead from President Trump, and he’s hit the ground running,” Ivey told reporters Wednesday. “And whatever he needs our help on, we’re going to give it to him.”
Ivey appointed Ashley W. Siebert as District Judge for the 28th Judicial Circuit in Baldwin County. Siebert, a graduate of Auburn University and the Thomas Goode Jones School of Law in Montgomery, will replace retiring Baldwin County District Judge Michelle Thomason.
Ivey, 80, will be the same age when her term ends in 2027 as President Joe Biden is as he finishes his time in the White House. Biden at 82 is the oldest serving president in American history.
Family members and advocates have asked Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer to intervene in a death penalty case set to move forward in Alabama.
Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman chronicle financial mismanagement, abuses of power and general inhumanities in a system allegedly designed for rehabilitation.
Danville-Neel Elementary School will be making an appearance at Governor Kay Ivey’s State of the State address on Tuesday. They will be congratulated as Ivey highlights Alabama’s achievement of improving 4th grade math standardized test scores at a rate greater than any other state in the country.
Results from the Nation’s Report Card for 2024 were released Wednesday, showing fourth and eighth graders across the nation’s progress in math and reading. “Alabama is not just a football state, we’re an education state,
Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey has issued a state of emergency declaration for 39 counties ahead of the upcoming winter weather.
Ivey on Friday announced that the application period for the Governor’s Office Summer Internship Program is now open.
Directors Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman sat down at our studio in Park City to discuss their remarkable investigative documentary.
A redacted and highly anticipated investigation finds that law enforcement in a small North Alabama city often makes improper arrests and fails to thoroughly investigate civilian complaints.
The new documentary "The Alabama Solution" uses cell phone footage to reveal shocking conditions inside Alabama prisons.