Natalie Cochran poisoned her husband with insulin so that he wouldn't find out about a $2 million Ponzi scheme that she admitted to operating, prosecutors say.
West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey announced Tuesday that about five dozen people had been detained within a day of ordering cooperation between Charleston and federal immigration authorities. By midday on Tuesday, 58 people in the Mountain State were detained within the Regional Jail system pending verification of their immigration status.
The couple each faced over a dozen counts involving their adopted children, including child neglect, civil rights violations, human trafficking, and forced outdoor labor - which the eldest says mostly occurred in Washington state.
A West Virginia city and county on Tuesday urged the state's top court to revive their $2.5 billion lawsuit accusing the three largest U.S. drug distributors of fueling the opioid epidemic, asking it to rule that opioid sales can give rise to a public nuisance under state law.
A West Virginia pharmacist already serving a federal prison sentence in a fraud case was convicted Wednesday in state court in the killing of her husband. A jury found Natalie Cochran guilty of first-degree murder in Raleigh County Circuit Court,
Curtis Shorts, 42, of Wellsburg, West Virginia pleaded guilty to the two counts of sexual abuse after other counts of first-degree sexual abuse and third-degree sexual assault were dismissed in a
Kira Maunz from Legal Aid West Virginia specializes in helping low-income renters know their rights and she recommends that renters sign a lease and are well ve
After a season of proving he was the best player in the state of West Virginia, Martinsburg quarterback Koi Fagan is making sure he stays right at home. The Bulldogs' signal caller announced Wednesday evening that he is committing to Marshall.
Everything you need to know in order to watch the West Virginia Mountaineers take on the Houston Cougars on Wednesday. Jan. 29.
A West Virginia couple accused of neglect and forced labor involving their adopted children was convicted by a jury on Wednesday after eight hours of deliberations. Jeanne Kay Whitefeather and Donald Ray Lantz went on trial in mid-January and each faced over a dozen counts,
If passed, the bill would require the U.S. Congress to formally declare war to deploy South Dakota National Guard members.