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The Kentucky Department of Corrections is a state agency of the Kentucky Justice & Public Safety Cabinet that operates state-owned adult correctional facilities and provides oversight for and sets standards for county jails. They also provide training, community based services, and oversees the state's Probation & Parole Division.
On March 4, 1925, President Calvin Coolidge, a former Governor of Massachusetts and very familiar with the benefits of a functioning probation system, signed the bill in to law. This Act gave the U.S. Courts the power to appoint Federal Probation Officers and authority to sentence defendants to probation instead of a prison sentence.
Ed C. Davis 1878–1882 29 A.B. Miller 1882–1886 30 B.E.W. Stout 1886–1890 31 Joe W. Jones 1890–1902 32 Ike Short 1902–1906 33 Jesse Harl 1906–1910 34 Ike Winstead 1910–1914 35 Bush Milton 1914–1918 36 George Bales 1918–1922 37 John Howard 1922–1926 38 Len Dawson 1926–1930 39 Charles L. Robey 1930–1932 40 Robert M. Stuart
A Kentucky sheriff pleaded guilty this week to two charges of official misconduct and two counts of menacing. The plea by Trigg County Sheriff Aaron Acree included a sentence of one year in jail ...
The sheriff was accused of driving his marked cruiser while intoxicated in the first incident and overturning a tractor in the second.
Eight months later, on Aug. 16, 2023, Allen was promoted within the Department of Corrections to probation and parole officer, based in Union County, with a $10,000-a-year raise and the ...
In January 1983, the Kentucky Department of Corrections received control of the property and renamed it Northpoint Training Center. It was intended as a minimum-security institution for fewer than 500 inmates, but quickly changed to a medium-security institution with a proposed population of approximately 700 inmates.
In Kentucky, squatters who openly live on a property for 15 years may try to claim ownership of the property. Luckily for Toma, the situation didn't get that far.