On Sunday, veterans, residents and local and state officials gathered at the Greenup County War Memorial to remember and honor those veterans who died in service to their country.
The Pavilion at the former OLBH is seen.Â
The Greenup County Fiscal Court met for its regular meeting in April to discuss both old and new business.
Old business consisted mainly of paying bills, and new business included a proposal by County Judge-Executive Robert Carpenter of establishing a fund with a portion of the money the county received through sale of the Bellefonte Pavilion property.
Carpenter initially proposed that $1 million be set back in a fund accessible to the Industrial Development Authority to be used to help new businesses set up on the Industrial Parkway.
The nominated John McGinnis, Chairman of the Industrial Development Authority, said the first thing that should be done is to determine the locations available.
Usually, appellate counsel can confidently say that a grant of
partial summary judgment, standing alone, will not allow for an interlocutory appeal. A complete grant of summary judgment is a final, appealable judgment, but a partial grant is usually not appealable until the end of the case. A recent published opinion from the Court of Appeals, however, staked out a new path.
In
Woody v. Vickrey, the litigants disputed whether Woody was competent to revoke a trust agreement and convey property. The trial court granted summary judgment to the defendant-trustee on all the claims involving Woody’s competency, determining that there was no genuine dispute that Woody was in fact incompetent to revoke the trust and convey property to family members.
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A former Altoona man in prison for drug-related offenses that occurred more than two decades ago has lost his latest attempt to have his 31-year minimum sentence reduced.
Charles A. Bellon, now 41, argued to the Pennsylvania Superior Court that he had been denied a hearing before a Blair County judge who was under a federal court order to resentence him.
Senior Judge Hiram A. Carpenter of Blair County, who presided over Bellon’s trial in 2006, and who sentenced him to serve 31 to 62 years in a state correctional institution, was ordered by U.S. District Judge Kim R. Gibson to correct a portion of Bellon’s 2006 sentence.