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June 16, 2025 • 21 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good Monday morning, Kentucky Anda. Welcome in Kentucky Anda's morning
news here on News Radio eight forty whas it is
seven oh five, as we get the seven o'clock hours started,
Nick Coffee, Scott Fitzgerald, you heard Joe Lincoln there, Who's
filling in this morning for John Shannon. We've got John
Allen and we've got the whole crew here. And obviously
a lot to react to from the weekend. Hopefully everybody

(00:21):
had a good Father's Day weekend around here, but obviously
a lot of protests still going on across the country,
and an awful situation took place on Friday night that
continues to be a big story out in Minnesota. As
by the way, maybe if you're just getting your day started,
this may be news to you as this this was
something that took place last night. But they did capture

(00:44):
the suspect, Vance Bolter, who is accused of killing a
Minnesota lawmaker and her husband and her husband and then
leaving another badly hurt. Same thing. It was a husband
wife duo, so they were able to after a couple
of days, they were able to track this guy down

(01:06):
thanks to the help of somebody who had I believe
it was a trail cam that noticed some activity that
was I think I don't know the exact distance, but
not terribly far from where they found the suspect's car abandoned.
So with some help, authorities were able to arrest this person.
And of course they're facing state, both state and federal

(01:28):
murder charges. Also there's also a charge for fleeing prosecution.
So I mean, just an awful situation from top to bottom.
And what I'm curious, and I shouldn't be curious because
it's weird saying that I'm eager to hear is if
there's going to be some kind of explanation from this
person as far as what they did. But maybe there

(01:50):
is something to learn from it. Again, clearly, if this
person's willing to talk and say what led them, there
won't excuse it by any means. There's no scenario where
words will justify what took place. But maybe I guess
there is some value in figuring out what led to
the extreme measures this person took to commit such an awful,
awful act of violence that again has taken two people's lives,

(02:13):
So that of course has been a big story. But
again I think what is most most recent here is
that they did overnight capture this suspect and they will
be facing a judge today, so we'll keep you up
to date on that throughout the day here at news
Radio eight forty whas also again protesting me going on
across the country for a while now, at least the
last week, and Louisville has had some and then of

(02:33):
course Louisville is one of the many cities that had
no King protests, rallies, whatever you want to call it.
That took place over the weekend. So downtown Louisville about
four thousand people were out and it started at noon
concluded around four o'clock downtown Louisville, not far at all
from where we're sitting right here, and it was seeing

(02:54):
some of the coverage of it and all the pictures
and videos of the protest, I mean, I could tell
exactly where they were and you and it's not far
off from where we're sitting right now. But I believe,
regardless of what your thoughts are on the protests, and
I mean regardless of what your thoughts are on the
reason the people are protesting, or if you think they
should be able to protest, to the ability they did

(03:16):
on Saturday, where of course there were streets that you
couldn't get through if you were trying to drive. So again,
I'm only bringing it up to say, whatever your thoughts are,
if in fact we see that there were no arrests
made during this four hour protest that had four thousand people,
isn't that a win win for everybody? I mean, like,
put your thoughts aside. I mean, this would have been

(03:36):
it wouldn't have been a surprise by any means if
there were arrest made, because you typically get arrests at
least one or a few that take place, because even
if there are ninety eight percent of those, they're doing
it peacefully knowing to not cross that line. All it
takes is a couple to cross the line, and then
that could be the invitation for others to do so.

(03:57):
So again, I'm surprised, but pleasantly surprised that we didn't
end up having a bunch of arrests, and maybe it
being because here's the thing, had there been some type
of real let me give you an example. I don't
know where this was, and I suppose it's important, but
I just I didn't I didn't track which city this
took place in, But there were horses, law law enforcement

(04:19):
on horses, and that's that's happening around here too. It's
not that that's in a lot of places. But there
was a video of of somebody walking up to a
police officer and crossing the line by not not hitting,
but at least putting their hands on the horse. Can't
do that stupid thing that you can't do that, that's
like putting your hands on law enforcement. You're asking to
be arrested. So so again that ended up becoming a

(04:40):
national story and it was in you know, it was
in a I don't know which city it was. But
my point is we didn't really have anything that took
place that I've seen as far as a viral clip
on social media that ends up on the news and
when they're when they're covering all the different protests that
take place across the country. We didn't get thrown into

(05:00):
the top tier of hey, look at take a look
at what happened here, Like it wasn't contentious enough to
where did you see the last made news for the
wrong reasons here in louisvill Which again I think that's
best case scenario.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
What'd you see the national anthem a the Dodgers Giants Gameza, yes,
saying that, saying it in Spanish as a protest.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
And it has been confirmed that the Dodgers did not
want her to do that.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
Right exactly.

Speaker 1 (05:19):
Yeah. So that Look, that's just where we are. That's
the current climate with things. And again we'll keep you
updated as best we can. There's been a change to
what President Trump is having Ice do when it comes
to immigration. We'll talk about that. On the other side,
we've got another update of sports coming your way. You know,
I'm going to find a way to squeeze in some

(05:40):
more talk about my Louis of Cardinals. So it's obviously
been talked about this morning, but they survived yesterday in Omaha.
They're now back in action tomorrow with another game where
it's winner go home, a rematch that they I'm sure
they're eager to get that rematch against the Beavers.

Speaker 2 (05:53):
Well us a major announcement coming later this morning surrounding
Low City.

Speaker 1 (05:58):
There we go.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
Now, we got some good news up on that front too.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
Good stuff on a Monday, Hi, buddy, let's get an
update of traffic and weather. It's seven to eleven here
at news Radio eight forty whas it is seven fifteen
here Kentucky in his morning news with Nick Coffee on
News Radio eight forty whas, thanks for hanging out with
us here this morning. I do want to remind folks
once again that the second phase of the inspections taking

(06:23):
place on the Clark Memorial Bridge start today, and it
sounds as if phase two is expected to be a
little bit more impactful when it comes to traffic, So
just keep that in mind. If you are somebody that
has a daily commute that involves the Clark Memorial Bridge,
you may want to plan to give yourself a little
bit of extra time, So just be mindful of that. Also,

(06:43):
when it comes to the ice raids that are taking
place across the country, clearly there's many people protesting against
that and they have strong opinions on that. However, I
do feel like, and who am I to say what
is going under the radar and what is not. But
I do feel just from my perspective, it doesn't seem
as if this has gotten as much attention as I
would have expected. And that is that President Trump has

(07:05):
told ICE to pause immigration arrests at farms, hotels and restaurants,
and this is reportedly because of the issues that it
could cause for these industries that very much rely on
migrant labor. Two officials told CBS News that this sudden

(07:25):
shift follows complaints from growers, hotel chains, and trade groups
who fear losing staff during peak summer demand. The pause
does not affect ongoing raids at factories or in city streets,
but it halts plans sweeps at hundreds of food service
and hospitality sites all the agency reviews economic impacts. The
change marks a sharp pivot for the Trump administration, which

(07:47):
has vowed to deport millions in recently top one hundred
thousand arrests this term. So this is big news, of course,
and I'm not sure many would dispute that, but what
I think is pretty the obvious takeaway leads from my standpoint,
is you should be if you're going to do this,
I mean you would think you would, You would know
that consistency would be needed. What this is saying is,

(08:09):
if you were here illegally, we really really or there's
no questions to be asked, We're coming, We're snatching you up,
and you're out of here unless you work in industries
that heavily rely on people who may be here illegally.
I mean, am I wrong? I mean, I mean again,
I'm not trying to put words in anybody else's mouth,

(08:31):
but like to me, that was the obvious. Well wait
a second, because whenever you decided to really put this
whole thing in motion to just start getting legal immigrants
out of this country with really the I was going
to use the word force, and I don't really think
that that's out of line, but that wasn't the word
I was looking for. But when you were going to

(08:51):
be this aggressive it and making it such a priority
to just get people out of this country that are
here illegally, I mean, didn't you know at that time?
How could you not know at that time that we do,
in fact in this country there are certain industries that
rely heavily on migrant labor.

Speaker 2 (09:09):
So well, that's kind of what we heard Dell Romans
talk about out of Churchill Downs when they had their
sort of held cord out there on the backside. Sure
we and said, look, we have a lot of good
folks here who do a lot for us, and to
be honest, with the jobs nobody wants to do and
is as big as the economic engine is here in
Kentucky when it comes to horse racing. He was basically,

(09:31):
we need these people here, and if they're honest and
they're paying taxes, isn't it worth another look?

Speaker 1 (09:36):
Sure? And when you're when it's not your world, meaning
when it's not something that you really can relate to,
or it's not it's not your industry, you really just
don't know. But I mean, I'm sure there are countless
scenarios where if, in fact, you snapped your fingers and
everybody that was in this country illegally was gone, the
impact that would have Again, You'd have endless scenarios that

(10:00):
I'd sit here and think, oh, yeah, I never would
have thought of that, because you know, I don't work
in that field. That's not an industry I have any
familiarity with. But yeah, it makes sense that if those
people aren't around that it impacts it impacts certain industries
in a major way. So clearly there's I don't see
this becoming an issue. I don't see this being something

(10:22):
that is just blown over anytime soon. I could be wrong,
but it does seem as if things have calmed down
in Los Angeles, which which that really started last week
as far as it just kind of getting you know,
it wasn't it wasn't escalating. Seemingly, protests are still going
to be taking place and this thing will run its course.
But I don't know. I'm always in the I always

(10:42):
ask myself when it comes to things like this, are
we at a point where we expect this to maybe
get a little worse before it gets better? Or are
we heading in the direction where it is going to
slowly but surely get better. And at this point it's
tough to say, but again, that is the bit that's
a big piece of news that as a Friday, I
believe it was. They've they've now told ICE to no
longer go in and raid certain businesses that rely heavily

(11:07):
on migrant labor, like farms, restaurants, hotels. But again, if
we're talking about factories in the streets and whatnot, you're
still going to see these rates taking place. All right,
we got another update of sports coming your way, but
first let's check in on traffic and weather right here
on news Radio eight forty whas. Thank you, Joe. It
is seven thirty five here at news Radio eight forty Whas.

(11:29):
Kentucky and his Morning News with Nick Coffee. Appreciate you
hanging out with us. Right as we were starting the newscast,
there WKY our partners. They're on the big screen in
front of me, which they are each and every morning.
They were showing all the different photos videos. I think
they had a chopper cam there. But the accident that

(11:50):
took place on Friday morning, it was actually about an
hour after we wrapped up the show. That is, whenever
you had a scary situation that really it's miraculous that
nobody was involved. It was a single single vehicle accident
where the eighteen wheeler ended up somehow getting into an
accident at the on ramp near the bridge, and it's

(12:12):
on fire, big flames, and the driver was able to
escape the vehicle before the fire started. And obviously the
cab of the eighteen wheeler did in fact fall from
the bridge, but it was empty, it wasn't carrying any
hazardous materials and that's a miracle. But again, just seeing
some of these things, maybe it's because we have a

(12:34):
radar at least I do now of Okay, is that
a real photo or did somebody use the power of AI,
because I think we all know AI can be scary
when it comes to generating photo and now even video
that looks real but there's little details when you're thinking,
wait a second, it looks a little cartoonish to where
maybe it's maybe it's not real. But these these photos
and videos were real, because that's something that really happened.

(12:55):
And I talked about this earlier. I just want to
clarify I'm not I'm not putting in taking anybody to
tab saying there's any specific reason for this happening. I
just think it is a wild coincidence that we here
in Louisville in the last fifteen months roughly, have had
three different situations where you've had an accident with a
semi truck that ends up in either the cab of

(13:17):
the truck or the entire thing, seemingly at times dangling
from one of our bridges or an overpass like we
saw on Friday mornings. So obviously, I don't think I
don't think there's any way to tie any of these
three things together to claim that there's one specific reason
that these things happen. More than anything, it's just a

(13:39):
wild coincidence. Because you could find a city that is
bigger than ours that has way more traffic throughout the day,
that may have more bridges with more vulnerability for these
kind of things to happen. And in one hundred years
it may have never happened, and yet here we've had
it happen three times. It's just a wild coincidence. And
those things, they fascinate me more than anything. It's because

(14:02):
nobody got hurt on Friday. Like it's you saw the
I mean that you saw the aftermath of it on
the screen there, Scott. It's yeah, it's wild.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
Well, and it says according to the American Truckers Association,
a truck driver shortage of about seventy eight thousand drivers
was present in twenty and twenty two. They expect that
by twenty twenty eight to rise to one hundred and
sixty thousand. And I say that because immediately after the
accident happened, as I'd love to do, I go to
our social media pages here at the station, get the

(14:29):
polls for what people are talking about. And there were
some veteran truck drivers that were saying that they in
fact think that they're pushing these truckers through these schools
too fast. And I can't validate that and I'm working
on a story for that for Kentucky Focus somebody.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
It wouldn't shock me if that was the case exactly.

Speaker 2 (14:46):
And they're saying, because there is such a shortage and
we need our goods, and we saw that after COVID
when things shut down, we had the porch shut down.
We value our truck drivers and they're trying to get
them out there. But are they pushing them through too fast?

Speaker 1 (14:59):
Nick?

Speaker 2 (15:00):
If you've driven parts of sixty five, we've all hit
spaghetti junction and when it rained, you have to slow down.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
Oh yeah, yeah, I mean, And what this is just
my curiosity. Each driver probably a much different situation. Maybe
somebody that's not from here, Maybe somebody that is from
here and takes that route every day. Again, it's just
it's tough to know, and it's it's really not relevant.
But if anything, you just chalk it up to maybe
just not understanding that you need to be going a

(15:25):
certain speed limit when you are in that area, and
if not, you'll you could you could have an accident.
I mean the one that took place that became a
real national story just because of the rescue that was
needed when they were hanging off the second Street bridge,
that Cisco truck. Again, heroic effort from the first responders
and Louisville Fire Department who showed up, And I was
just I was nerding out on just how calm they

(15:46):
were and their ability to keep the person that was
trapped inside calm. I mean, those are those are real
life savers and for them to just never know when
that's going to happen, but be ready to execute when
it does happen, it was a beautiful thing to see.
But when that took place, that was just a car
accident that ended up in where like you're on a bridge,
you've got an eighteen wheeler. When you're in an accident

(16:06):
and vehicles are moving about, there's not a whole lot
of space. You can't go off the road. You go
off the road, you on a bridge, you're in water.
So just a situation.

Speaker 2 (16:15):
You mentioned one of the solutions they might be looking
at as sort of an adhesive epoxy. I guess what
they were talking about, and that's something they've used in
NASCAR before. They've actually put some of that note. It's
almost like a version of no slip, and they put
it up in the tracks and that might help. Maybe
they can use that technology. I don't know. I'm not
a transportation expert. I don't claim to be one on
the radio, but I guarantee.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
You you could have told me you were one and
out of believe.

Speaker 2 (16:37):
Changes are coming. I can guarantee.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
KYTC is planning safety improvements as mentioned, including an epoxy
surface treatment that could help. But the cleanup on Friday
took a long time because the intense fire. It welded
the truck to the trailer, which complicated, you know, the
recovery efforts. According to the Suburban Suburban Towing who was

(17:01):
tasked with trying to get that thing cleaned up, Yeah
it was a mess. But again, the miracle is that
nobody nobody got here. Did you hear that the Bullet
County came out a miracle? I gotta watch it. I
gotta watch it. That's what I need to do. If
I start, if I start sounding like a day the
bad joke jar its. The Bullet County accs. Yeah, it
was a miracle out there. We got another update of

(17:23):
traffic and weather coming your way. And they did not
try to set up a big party on the highlands
this past weekend. At least it doesn't seem but they
decided to take the party elsewhere those that do enjoy
being out late, shutting down streets, doing whatever. But they
got caught pretty quickly. We'll tell you about lmpd's efforts
on Saturday to quickly shut down I guess relocation efforts

(17:44):
right taking what was going on in the Highlands to
a different spot. But again they were shut down quickly,
So we'll hit on that. On the other side, it's
Kentucky and it's Morning News on News Radio eight forty
whas it is seven forty seven here at Kentucky and
his Morning News on News Radio eight forty whas Nick
call with you, and there seems to be real improvement
from the It was really two straight weekends where you

(18:05):
had some chaos on Bargstown Road and in the Highlands.
Now I know it went on more than just those
two weekends, but it got to a different level for
two straight weeks, and obviously LMPD and Mayor Greenberg emphasized
making sure that that did not become a thing that
happened for a third straight weekend, and I think on
Saturday of this past weekend, meaning just two days ago.

(18:29):
As far as that area, I think it was another
sign of real progress. However, and I don't know if
it's the same people that were looking to do the
same thing that was taking place in previous weeks on
Bargetown Road in the Highlands. But there was a pop
up party that took place that did not happen, didn't
didn't last very long. So LMPD on Saturday evening broke

(18:52):
up in illegal pop up parties they call it. It was
in the thirteen hundred block of River Road near Big
Four Bridge, with hundreds of people in at ten. It
was about eleven thirty where the Louisville Metro Alcoholic Beverage
Control alerted LMPD about an unlicensed event at an establishment
where the crowd was again estimated at over one thousand
people inside and outside. So lmpd's rapid response team was deployee,

(19:16):
discovering in fact the crowd being larger than they expected,
and they shut it down. They shut the party down
and the attendees dispersed to nearby parking lots, requiring the
police to form a line to get everybody cleared out
of there. So a lot of coordinating, a lot of
organizing to just you know, it's probably a big effort
to as smooth as possible, get that thing shut down

(19:37):
and get people out of there without any real incident.
And the good thing is the crowd complied and there
was no incident, no arrests were made. Four cars were
towed in the Barstown Road area, though no issues were
reported there or near where the previous So again you
had people, I guess, trying to maybe and I shouldn't

(19:57):
say that because I don't know, maybe it's a completely
separate thing regardless if you're trying to whoever it is,
wherever it is, if it's in Louisville, and you're trying
to put these type of things together late at night,
where you're shutting down streets and just doing things you're
not supposed to be doing. I think LLMPD in recent
weeks has I think done a good job of letting

(20:17):
it be known not only with words but action, that
we're not going to let it happen.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
Yeah, you're seeing pushback from law enforcement in a lot
of areas, Nick, and especially on that, and I mean
positive pushback. I'm not talking about their being aggressive. However,
as we say, with the ice protests, I watched a
couple press conferences over the weekend where law enforcement basically
said listen, if you touch us, if you spin on us,
if you do this, this, and this, you will won't

(20:43):
take action accordingly and as they should. But did it
in a tactful way, and I appreciate the good folks
law enforcement doing that.

Speaker 1 (20:51):
Yeah, I mean no arrests means that they came shut
it down, and not to say everybody went smoothly, but
it never got to the point where somebody had to
be arrested, right And you know, when it comes to
what you just mentioned as far as law enforcement letting
you know, look, if you do this, like, we're going
to do our job. And that is too But what
I find to be I shouldn't say this, but it's

(21:12):
amusing almost that you'll see people when it comes to
these bodycm clips that end up on the internet of
somebody getting arrested mostly TikTok. Honestly, you'll see somebody warned
like five six times, don't do it. I'm telling you
you need it, don't do it, and then and then
and then they're like, what are you doing putting me
in a headcuffs? It's well, you were warned like many times,
So it was exactly good stuff. We got an update

(21:35):
of traffic and weather coming up. Also another update of
sports right here on news Radio eight forty whas
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