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The Kingfisher Police Department has investigated or responded to the following reports:
Read moreHide and seek should be a game for children, not for ruthless feds. But here we are. An American citizen, innocent until proven guilty, is fighting for his freedom against a government juggernaut hell-bent on framing him as a violent Jan. 6 insurrectionist. One crucial key to clearing his name, his lawyer argues, lies in 30 seconds of a Capitol surveillance video that prosecutors don’t want the public to see.
Read moreEnter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.
Read moreTown of Hennessey utility customers were set for a cost increase in trash costs and decreased twice-a-week pickups this month, but that won’t take effect until next month.
Read moreWheat harvest is almost finished across Kingfisher County. Some elevators still had wheat trickling in but operators reported the harvest is mostly history. While the harvest news was mostly good, Hennessey’s CHS Elevator reported that while a few farmers were still harvesting, some wheat may never be harvested due to grain sprouting in the heads after heavy downpours a weekend ago. CHS Elevator at Okarche reported a few loads were still arriving late in the week but the harvest was basically done. Mike Rosen, manager of Wheeler Brothers Grain Co., said Wednesday that the area harvest was only a couple of days away from completion. John Schaefer at Cashion Grain and Feed elevator said a few farmers in the Piedmont area were still cutting wheat but not much was left. CHS Elevator at Omega was mostly done, a spokesman said. A majority of the county’s wheat was harvested before the late rains that pushed the June rainfall totals to nine inches and more. Good yields and good quality were uniform before the late rain arrived. [Photo Courtesy Lisa Harris via Facebook]
Read moreSupporters of Kingfisher Public School students and teachers proved their overwhelming generosity last year was not just a Covid-fueled fluke.
Read moreAn entity selling property insurance coverage to school districts, which paid more than $1.5 million to the Oklahoma State School Boards Association for endorsements, is going out of business as of the end of June, leaving dozens of districts facing significant liability even as they search for new coverage.
Read moreThe Oklahoma Blood Institute late last month declared an emergency blood shortage.
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