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Post by In The News on Aug 20, 2013 3:53:39 GMT -5
herald-leader.com Man injured in Clay County wreck died Sunday By Karla Ward
A 21-year-old man from Russell Springs has died of injuries sustained in a wreck on the Hal Rogers Parkway Friday afternoon. Jacob M. Lucas died at University of Kentucky Chandler Hospital at 11:26 p.m. Sunday, according to a news release from the Fayette County coroner's office. The coroner's office said the state police reported that Lucas was driving a Ford F-150 pickup truck that hit a vehicle that was stopped in traffic in a construction zone at mile marker 16 in Clay County at 4:53 p.m. Friday. Traffic had stopped at a temporary traffic signal that was set up during work on a bridge. The coroner's office said Lucas, who was taken by helicopter to Manchester Memorial Hospital and then transferred to UK, died of blunt force injuries. Read more here: www.kentucky.com/2013/08/19/2775498/russell-springs-man-injured-in.html
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Post by Kentucky News on Aug 22, 2013 13:39:15 GMT -5
Clay County has a 12.9% jobless rate Commonwealth News Center press release
Clay County had a 12.9% jobless rate, according to the Kentucky Office of Employment and Training, an agency of the Kentucky Education and Workforce Development Cabinet. 6,103 people in Clay County have a job while 906 are actively seeking employment. Harlan County recorded the state’s highest unemployment rate — 17.2 percent. It was followed by Leslie County, 16.9 percent; Magoffin County, 16.8 percent; Letcher County, 16.3 percent; Fulton County, 15.7 percent; Knott County, 15 percent; Bell County, 14.5 percent; Jackson County, 13.9 percent; Wolfe County, 13.5 percent; and McCreary County, 13.4 percent. Woodford County recorded the lowest jobless rate in the Commonwealth at 5.8 percent. It was followed by Fayette County, 6.4 percent; Oldham County, 6.5 percent; Scott County, 6.6 percent; Carlisle County, 6.7 percent; Jessamine and Simpson counties, 6.8 percent each; Daviess and Franklin counties, 6.9 percent each, and Boone, Hancock and Owen counties, 7 percent each. Unemployment statistics are based on estimates and are compiled to measure trends rather than actually to count people working. Civilian labor force statistics include non-military workers and unemployed Kentuckians who are actively seeking work. They do not include unemployed Kentuckians who have not looked for employment within the past four weeks. The statistics in this news release are not seasonally adjusted because of the small sample size for each county. The data should only be compared to the same month in previous years. Learn more about Kentucky labor market information at www.kylmi.ky.gov.
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Post by Press Release on Sept 3, 2013 17:53:04 GMT -5
Nursing professors aim to prepare Clay County for the worst University of Tennessee Press Release
In Clay County, Kentucky, clean water is hard to come by. If a tornado hit the area, shelter and medical treatment also would be hard to find. A group of faculty members and students at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, is trying to change this situation. Nursing professors in the Global Disaster Nursing program are working with architecture and environmental engineering professors, law enforcement professionals, graduate students and Clay County community partners to improve the area's community wellness and disaster preparedness. The project is made possible through a $1.5 million grant over three years from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). Through a constant flow of communication between the project group and community members, the group will identify, evaluate and address the health and disaster readiness needs of Clay County. "This project launches a new nursing model for the nation," said College of Nursing Dean Victoria Niederhauser. "What makes it truly unique is that it brings together disciplines that rarely work together and integrates the varied skills with planning and knowledge sharing with community members." Clay County is an isolated area ranked 119th out of 120 Kentucky counties on major health indicators. The population is ill-equipped to deal with a disaster because of unsafe housing, insufficient shelter, inadequate sanitation, limited public resources, poverty, and lack of disaster education and essential reserves of food and water. "The link between wellness and the capacity of communities to recover from disaster is clear," said Susan Speraw, the project lead and coordinator of UT's Global Disaster Nursing graduate program. "With Clay County partners as members of the team, this project can result in significant positive change and increase the community's ability to be resilient in the face of disaster or public health emergency." At the same time, the project will train a new generation of professionals to work together to achieve the best possible outcome. "The collaboration with the nursing program is a fantastic example of how creativity works," said J. David Matthews, Interior Design program chair. "By bringing together two very different disciplines, we can build amazing new design ideas that cannot be realized independently." "We look forward to providing input on reducing the safety concerns of the hospital including potential threats and access issues," said Don Green, executive director of UT's Law Enforcement Innovation Center. Over three years, the group aims to have a comprehensive assessment of the community's health status, living conditions, and disaster readiness and vulnerability; an enhancement of overall wellness, including structural safety of homes and buildings; and the development of a community that has sufficient disaster preparedness training and resources. The project members will write grants to pay for costly updates and work with UT students and volunteers to implement solutions. "Flooding in Clay County this year was devastating—compromising homes, health, safety and sanitation," said Tracy Nolan, director of community outreach at Red Bird Mission. "With UT's help and knowledge of best practices, we will identify innovative solutions to local issues, never before attainable." "Emergency management is about preparing for uncertainty, and we are so excited to have the additional resources made possible through this grant," said David Watson, emergency management director for Clay County and executive director of Manchester Memorial Hospital. Participants include nursing professors Susan Speraw, Moriah McArthur and Mary Nypaver; architecture and design professors John McRae and J. David Matthews; John Schwartz, environmental engineering professor; Don Green from the UT Law Enforcement Innovation Center; graduate students; the UT Institute for Assessment and Evaluation; and two Clay County community partners, Red Bird Mission and Clay County Emergency Management.
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Post by In The News on Sept 14, 2013 8:56:47 GMT -5
Jesse Lee Jones
kansascity.com Part of Kentucky 190 to be renamed as the Jesse Lee Jones Memorial Highway
The Middlesboro Daily News (http://bit.ly/16k7BgE ) reports Bell County Fiscal Court voted to rename a portion of Kentucky 190 as the Jesse Lee Jones Memorial Highway. Jones, who was 28, and two others died in June when the medical helicopter they were in crashed near Manchester. The team was on their way back to base after transporting a patient to a London hospital. Jones grew up in the area, attending Frakes Elementary School and graduating from Bell County High School in 2003. He graduated from Southeast Kentucky Community & Technical College with an associate's degree in nursing. Kathy Guyn, division chair of nursing and related technologies program coordinator at the college, said Jones was living his dream by working as a flight nurse in Air Evac's Manchester office. Read more here: www.kansascity.com/2013/09/11/4473427/e-ky-highway-to-be-named-after.html
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Post by In The News on Sept 18, 2013 17:19:56 GMT -5
We made it on ESPN2 with our racing. The program will air Saturday from 7:30 AM- 8:30 AM. I hope you will take the time to watch your home town team do good.
Michael Nolan, Nolan Racing
Photo courtesy of David Smith/PSA
Don Nolan Enjoys Career-Best Finish at Carolina Nationals Courtesy of NVW Motorsports Promotion
Prior to the Carlyle Tools NHRA Carolina Nationals, Top Alcohol Dragster driver Don Nolan had only qualified for two races outside of the 2013 season. He not only qualified for this race, he qualified in the top half of the strong field, ran career-best numbers by a bunch, and beat two of the class’ most accomplished drivers on his way to the semifinals. Nolan was the talk of the alcohol pits after he drove his VisoneRV.com blown alcohol dragster to the provisional No. 2 spot following two qualifying sessions on Friday, clocking a career-best 5.406 at 263 miles per hour. Though he ran a close 5.45 during Saturday’s final qualifying session, he was bumped to No. 7 in the sixteen-car field. “We were not expecting that 5.40. I expected maybe a mid to high 5.4 run out of the car this weekend. The crew and I were very excited to see those numbers to close out a difficult season,” said Nolan, owner of Nolan Surveying. Don would face multi-event winning driver and world championship tuner Randy Meyer in the opening round of eliminations. Racing under the lights at Charlotte, N.C.’s state-of-the-art zMax Dragway, Meyer lost traction early into the run while Nolan clicked off another 5.45 to earn the first round win of his early TAD career. Another tough competitor would be in the other lane for the quarter-finals. Five-time world champion and Top Alcohol Dragster icon Bill Reichert provided a good race, but it was Don’s VisoneRV.com entry taking the win in a 5.42 to 5.48 match. “It’s an honor just to race with guys like Meyer and Reichert. To be able to beat them was just unbelievable. When I got to the end of the track, I thought the officials were going to tell me that I red-lighted. I had no idea that Randy smoked the tires,” Nolan said of his round wins. His luck ran short in the semifinal round. Nolan was thrown off by the staging procedure, double-stepped the throttle, and left too late. A .465 light and 5.50 run wasn’t nearly enough to beat Rich McPhillips’ .005 reaction time and 5.45 run. The Carlyle Tools Carolina Nationals was still a career weekend for Nolan and his crew of brother Michael Nolan and Mike Saltsman. Don cites a series of small problems for preventing the team from enjoying success earlier in their sophomore season. “We’ve been fighting little gremlins all season. Errors of inexperience on both ends cost us good runs on multiple occasions. After an oil line came loose and resulted in a DNQ at Columbus, we really started to turn things around,” Don said, adding, “We could have ten people tell us what to change with the fuel management or the clutch, and all ten could tell us something completely different from one another. All ten of them could be right, but I just went back to tuning it based off of what I know. It’s starting to work out for us.” Nolan Racing is Manchester, Kentucky-based Top Alcohol Dragster team, competing in the NHRA Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series. First generation driver Don Nolan pilots the family-owned VisoneRV.com/Nolan Construction blown alcohol dragster. Nolan Racing receives support from Visone RV and Auto Mart, Nolan Construction, Renegade Fuels and Oils, Robinson Meats, Cumberland Gap Bottled Water, and Hot Rods Service Center. To learn more about Nolan Racing, please visit: www.facebook.com/392racingtopalcoholnews.blogspot.com/2013/09/from-dnq-to-semifinalist-don-nolan.html
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Post by Press Release on Oct 8, 2013 11:02:20 GMT -5
dosomething.org Posh Spice receives "This Do Something With Style" nomination after Clay County trip
This Do Something With Style nomineePosh Spice started her career singing hits like “Wannabe” and “Say You'll Be There” with her 90s band Spice Girls. Nowadays, Victoria Beckham or "Posh Spice" is also known as an international style icon. But did you know that “Posh” spends a great deal of her time on causes that she is passionate about? On behalf of Save the Children, a non profit organization that helps children in need around the world, Victoria traveled to Clay County, Kentucky with her ten-year-old son Brooklyn. They conducted soccer lesson, met with school administration, participated in book bag exchange, and much more. "What I saw in Clay Country was the hope and promise inherent in every child. That's why we have to make sure every single child has a fair and equal start in life," said Victoria. Victoria also co-founded The Victoria and David Beckham Charitable Trust, which provides children in need with wheelchairs. If you wanna be her lover, then vote for Victoria now! Help this music star and fashion icon win the Do Something With Style award. www.dosomething.org/blog/celebsgonegood/nominee-profile-victoria-beckham
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Post by In The News on Oct 8, 2013 11:14:03 GMT -5
sentinel-echo.com Clay County man found dead near Laurel-Clay line
On Wednesday, Oct. 2, at approximately 5:58 p.m., the Kentucky State Police, Post 11 in London was notified by the Laurel County 9-1-1 Dispatch Center of an adult male found dead inside a home in Clay County near the Laurel County Line. Troopers arrived at the residence on Ben House Road, off Ky. 472, and discovered the victim had died of an apparent gunshot wound. The victim was identified as Carl House, 59, of Manchester and was pronounced dead at the scene by the Clay County Coroners Office. The victim’s body was transported to the State Medical Examiners Office in Frankfort where an autopsy is scheduled for Thursday. KSP Detective Jeff Senters is in charge of the investigation and was assisted at the scene by Trooper Justin Oliver, Trooper Nick Metcalf, Deputies from the Clay County Sheriff’s Office and Clay County EMS. www.sentinel-echo.com/local/x134973870/Man-found-dead-in-home
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Post by ClayLive on Oct 19, 2013 12:25:32 GMT -5
harlandaily.com Dr. Wheeler Conover honored by the University of the Cumberlands
Dr. Wheeler Conover, professor and chief academic officer of Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College, has been honored by his alma mater, the University of the Cumberlands, as one of that school’s most effective and successful graduates. A profile on Conover, a student at the Cumberlands from 1983 to 1987, is featured in a special edition publication commemorating the university’s 125thth anniversary. The book, slated to be released in the next few weeks, is produced by the University of the Cumberlands’ Alumni Affairs Office. The volume features 125 individuals who have made a lasting impact in their fields of study. Conover, a native of Manchester, earned a degree in chemistry from the Cumberlands and a master’s from the University of Tennessee, with a doctorate from the University of Cincinnati. He has been affiliated with Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College since 1996, beginning as an instructor of chemistry. He eventually worked his way to becoming the division chairman of natural sciences and mathematics before being promoted to chief academic officer in 2005. He said he is humbled by news of his inclusion in the book, noting: “It is hard for me to believe through the institution’s 125 years of service they would select me. It is truly an honor to be included along with the others who are certainly deserving of the recognition. Cumberlands was such a wonderful place for me to get my undergraduate education, and it gave me the solid foundation needed to become a scientist, while also shaping me as a person. I have carried with me the many friendships made and experiences gathered while a student there.” “Cumberlands was a wonderful experience for me,” he said, adding “I am glad I had the chance to enjoy the experience to study there.” www.harlandaily.com/news/news_local_features/2641281/Southeasts-Conover-honored-by-UC
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Post by In The News on Oct 24, 2013 13:23:11 GMT -5
(L-R) JACO Limousines and Transportation President Todd Roberts and Jamie Sparks, Regional Response Manager, KYEM Region 6 were at the Ribbon Cutting Ceremony and Open House Monday in Frankfort for the KYEM Headquarters and Commonwealth Emergency Operations Center.
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Post by ClayLive on Oct 31, 2013 13:25:50 GMT -5
Stanley Dezarn, right, and his wife Gladys chat with former Kentucky Governor Louie B. Nunn at the 1988 O’Tuck’s banquet.
Annual event to celebrate area’s Kentucky heritage By Richard Jones, Staff Writer
The O’Tucks will hold its 54th annual banquet Friday night to celebrate the area’s Kentucky heritage. The group was founded in 1955 by the late Stanley Dezarn, a Kentucky-born educator who moved to Hamilton to work in the Fairfield school district. Dezarn was, as he was fond of letting people know, born in a log cabin in Clay County, Ky., and prior to moving to Hamilton taught eight grades in a one-room school there. “It didn’t take Stanley long to realize his Kentucky ancestry wasn’t a plus in much of Southwestern Ohio,” wrote local historian Jim Blount, who was also a friend, in a history of the organization. “He recognized a problem that faced most Kentucky natives.” “They were stereotyped — and the subject of many jokes, some crude and some cruel,” he said. Dezarn recognized that their cultural differences often limited their opportunities and learned that it was best to just keep quiet about their Kentucky heritage. “Stanley Dezarn didn’t hide his pride in his humble ancestry,” Blount wrote, “not for a moment. And he didn’t believe others should hide theirs.” So, being part educator and part missionary, he founded the O’Tucks so that people would “come out of the closet” and boast, not apologize, for their roots. “He waged a forceful, but civil, campaign to end or at least soften the prejudice and discrimination inflicted on those from the hills and hollows,” Blount said. During the early years, the O’Tucks organized a day-long music festival at the Butler County Fairgrounds that would draw as many as 10,000 people, according to newspaper reports at the time, and featured animated pep talks from Dezarn. “A lot of times, he would book the musicians before he had the money to pay them,” Blount said, “but he would usually raise the money by the time they got here, and if he didn’t he’d take the money out of his own pocket.” Later on, when Blount and Dezarn organized an “O’Tucks Night” as part of the Fort Hamilton Days festival, they would pass a hat to pay for the bands. “It would be packed with 6,000 or 8,000 people,” Blount said. “One night, we came up with $10,000.” At Friday’s banquet, the O’Tucks will honor former Butler County Sheriff Don Gabbard and the late Vada Shell Stanley, wife of Ted Stanley, founder of the Danbury Mint, for their contributions to the O’Tucks scholarship fund, which Dezarn started in 1997 in partnership with Miami University Hamilton. Dezarn passed away in January 2004. www.journal-news.com/news/news/annual-event-to-celebrate-areas-kentucky-heritage/nbcmx
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Post by ClayLive on Oct 31, 2013 13:29:40 GMT -5
Oneida native, Joey Carmon is one of Reno’s busiest professional musicians
Joey was born in Oneida, KY and raised in Winchester, KY. and he has the accent to prove it. “I grew up singing in a very musical family. My mother sang alto, my dad sang bass and he and two of my brothers were choir directors. My sister, B.G. (Betty Gene Hibbard) is an excellent piano player and without her help I would’ve never figured out how to translate Dave Grusin’s piano instrumental, “Memphis Stomp” into guitar licks” When he was in grade school he started playing trombone in band only because, “we had one at the house”. After high school, Joey started taking banjo lessons while attending Milligan College Tenn. on a basketball scholarship. After joining the 264th Army band in Hawaii as a trombone player, he met some country pickers at Schofield Barracks. He ended up performing at the John F. Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. with the Army’s finest country band as a guitar/banjo player. Joey’s performed at the Grand Ol’ Opry, had his music on Continental Airlines, performed with members of the Honolulu Symphony on Waikiki Beach and opened shows for Marty Robbins and Ronnie Milsap. When you walk into a show where Joey Carmon is performing, you may hear a grand piano, a saxophone or trumpets and trombones, but you won’t see any of these. What you will see is Joey playing a guitar synthesizer. This synthesizer sounds so much like the real thing, you’ll be searching the stage looking for the other instruments! “I give credit to Earl Scruggs, Carl Jackson and Jerry Reed for my style of pickin’ guitar and banjo” with 4 CD’s to his credit. his latest endeavor is by far the most difficult and the most rewarding. “I started working on some Jerry Reed guitar instrumentals which have taken me years to figure out. www.itsallaboutmusic.org/?portfolio=joey-carmon
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Post by In The News on Nov 9, 2013 10:12:35 GMT -5
jerrysartarama.com Acrylic Painter has ties to Clay County
Vicki Gould was born and reared in southern, rural Indiana but has deep Kentucky roots. Her father's family was longtime residents of Carter County, Kentucky and her mother's family called Clay County, KY their home for many years. Vicki currently lives on a small hilltop farm in wester Elliot County where she enjoys tending chickens, turkeys, rabbits, and her beautiful Golden Retrievers. Vicki loves outdoor activities like fishing and simply admiring and enjoying the beauty of nature. As a young child, Vicki had a great interest in drawing and would add her own drawings to her school work. Vicki put aside her interest in drawing to raise a family. With her lifelong passion for drawing, her family and friends inspired and encouraged her to start drawing again. Check out some of her painting at: www.jerrysartarama.com/blog/post/2013/11/05/Acrylic-Painter-Vicki-Gould-in-Jerrys-Artist-Spotlight.aspx
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Post by In The News on Nov 13, 2013 21:02:26 GMT -5
Joe Hoskins Photo courtesy of Three Cedars Farm
Manchester native killed in a crash Monday was proud of his hillbilly heritage.
Thousands of children and adults alike who visited Salem Township’s Three Cedars Farm over the years were exposed to “Hillbilly Joe” Hoskins’ folksy charm, also evident on videos he narrates on the farm’s website. “I was born a hillbilly. I was raised a hillbilly. And I’m going to die a hillbilly,” Hoskins says at the end of a video. Hoskins was very much the face of the farm for 20 years, said its owner, Gary Whittaker, who is also the Salem Township supervisor. Many people thought Hoskins owned the farm. The Kentucky native helped plant the first pumpkins there, drove the tractor on hayrides, played Santa Claus and was even featured as a caricature on the stickers labeling the farm’s cider. “All the kids wanted to meet Hillbilly Joe,” Whittaker said. “He was always positive. He was unique individual. We’re going to miss him.” The farm, located at 7897 Six Mile Road, closed for the season on Sunday. Just before the crash Monday, Hoskins picked up a batch of leftover cider there and was headed out to give it to some to friends. His wife, Jonnie, was also in the vehicle, Whittaker said. The two were then involved in a crash on Pontiac Trail near Six Mile that left Hoskins dead and sent his wife to the hospital in critical condition. Whittaker said Jonnie, who played Ms. Claus to Hoskins' Santa, was “pretty banged up,” but expected to recover. The couple have two daughters, Whittaker said. Michigan State Police said on Tuesday that the crash, a head-on collision between a white van and a black vehicle, is still being investigated. One of the vehicles crossed the centerline of the road, but it wasn't immediately clear which one, officials at the scene said Monday evening. Whittaker said Hoskins was a native of Manchester, Ky., and came to Michigan in the 1950s. One of his first jobs was in an apple orchard on Stone Gate Drive just down the road from Three Cedars farm. www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor/index.ssf/2013/11/man_who_died_in_crash_remember.html
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Post by Press Release on Nov 23, 2013 6:02:05 GMT -5
Developing Leadership Capacity for a Healthy Clay receives Kentucky Community Rural Health grant
In recognition of National Rural Health Day, the Kentucky Community Rural Health Grants were awarded to a half-dozen rural health care coalition members in Louisville. A total of $26,000 in grant monies were awarded. The awards were made at a press conference by the Kentucky Hospital Association, the Kentucky Office of Rural Health and the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, Food and Environment. The Community and Economic Development Initiative of Kentucky in the UK college coordinated the program. Developing Leadership Capacity for a Healthy Clay With funds from the grant, Clay County’s coalition will host Emergentics, a daylong, facilitated conference for 40 local health leaders. In addition, the coalition will conduct a series of classes led by Manchester Memorial Hospital that will address six of the eight identified health issues in the hospital’s Community Health Needs Assessment, including nutritional standards and healthy lifestyle choices. www.kyforward.com/our-health/2013/11/22/kentucky-community-rural-health-grants-given-as-part-of-national-rural-health-day
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Post by Press Release on Dec 21, 2013 8:07:28 GMT -5
Manchester Pharmacy Owner Sentenced to 10 Years; forfeit a million dollars, home, and multiple vehicles U.S. Attorney’s Office Eastern District of Kentucky Press Release
A Manchester pharmacy owner and his wife will forfeit their home, more than a million dollars and six cars that were proceeds or purchased with proceeds from a drug conspiracy in which the pharmacy owner filled prescriptions for customers without a legitimate medical purpose. Charles Terry Tenhet, 63, of London, Ky., pleaded guilty today to a conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance. U.S. District Judge Amul Thapar sentenced Tenhet to 10 years in prison following the plea. Charles Tenhet’s wife, Melissa Tenhet, 50, was sentenced to 12 months and day in prison for her role in the conspiracy. She pleaded guilty on Monday. “Mr. Tenhet, with the assistance of Mrs. Tenhet, used his professional license to engage in a massive drug trafficking conspiracy,” said U.S. Attorney Kerry B. Harvey. “In so doing, he inflicted a great deal of pain on his community-one already hard hit by the scourge of prescription drug abuse. The punishment is well-deserved. Those in the healing arts deserve special attention from law enforcement authorities when they choose to betray their professional duties in favor of the ill-gotten gains made from drug trafficking.” Charles Tenhet admitted he filled out of state prescriptions for large quantities of oxycodone in exchange for cash for eastern Kentuckians who had traveled in groups to pain clinics in Georgia and Tennessee and returned to visit Charles Tenhet’s pharmacies– Community Drug and Medi-Center Drug. Some customers drove as far as 600 miles to visit the clinics. According to the plea agreement, Tenhet knew the visitors were potential drug traffickers and addicts. The plea agreement describes the Tenhets’ customers as being visibly high, lacking physical pain symptoms and appearing destitute and unemployed. Melissa Tenhet worked as the office manager for Community Drug and admitted she directed co-workers to fill the prescriptions even when the workers questioned the legality of the prescriptions. The Tenhets agreed to forfeit approximately a million dollars in cash, six vehicles, numerous luxury watches and a plot of land, all of which the Tenhets obtained or used as part of the conspiracy. The total value of all the assets forfeited was approximately three million dollars. Under federal law, both defendants will each have to serve at least 85 percent of their respective prison sentence. Kerry B. Harvey, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky, and Robert L. Corso, Special Agent in Charge of DEA, jointly announced the guilty pleas. The investigation was conducted by the DEA. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Parman represented the U.S. Attorney’s Office in this case.
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