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It includes the Hardin County Courthouse, built in 1933 in Georgian Revival style. The courthouse has a three-story brick central section with a slightly projecting entrance pavilion, which has a shallow portico. The courthouse replaced an 1873 courthouse which was damaged in 1932 by a fire. [2] The district is located on Kentucky Route 61. It ...
In 2019, the Kentucky Supreme Court created a Business Court Docket Pilot project in the Jefferson County Circuit Court, effective January 1, 2020. [1] Circuit judges serve in eight-year terms. There are 57 circuits, which may have one or more judges, depending on the population and docket size.
Court records show Riley was seeking a restraining order against the suspect, 46-year-old Christopher Elder, and the shooting happened just before a scheduled hearing in the case. ... Kentucky Gov ...
Elizabethtown is a home rule-class city [3] and the county seat of Hardin County, Kentucky, United States.The population was 28,531 at the 2010 census, [4] and was estimated at 31,394 by the U.S. Census Bureau in 2020, making it the ninth-most populous city in the state.
Hardin County Schools said only some of its schools were under lockdown Monday, but all have since returned to normal operations. Gov. Andy Beshear offered condolences in a statement on X ...
Hardin County is a county located in the central part of the U.S. state of Kentucky.Its county seat is Elizabethtown. [1] The county was formed in 1792. [2] Hardin County is part of the Elizabethtown-Fort Knox, KY Metropolitan Statistical Area, as well as the Louisville/Jefferson County—Elizabethtown-Bardstown, KY-IN Combined Statistical Area.
One of the victims, 37-year-old Erica Riley of Elizabethtown, had attended a court hearing in Hardin County with Elder Monday morning before the shooting, police said.
After graduating law school, from 1972 to 1973 he was chief trial counsel for the Kentucky Department of Highways in Hardin County and from 1973 to 1974, he served as a law clerk for the Kentucky Court of Appeals. From 1974 to 2006 he was a lawyer in the Bowling Green area. [3] He was elected to the Kentucky Court of Appeals in 2006. [5]