Oral argument before the state Supreme Court begins today in the case of five Georgia college professors who want public colleges and universities to be able to ban guns from campus.
The family of a man shot and killed on the property of a planned police training center is speaking publicly for the first time since the environmental activist died January 18th.
Georgia's only Jewish state lawmaker was among hundreds of people who got antisemitic fliers thrown on their lawns in five counties in Metro Atlanta over the weekend.
On Feb. 3, 2017, the Ocmulgee Mounds National Historical Park Boundary Revision Act was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives, officially setting in motion a plan to expand and protect the Ocmulgee Mounds under federal law. But six years later, supporters of the initiative are wondering when Macon will get its long-awaited national park.
Monday on Political Rewind:Republican legislators proposed bills that would make it easier to remove what they call "corrupt prosecutors" from district attorney's offices. Meanwhile, the DNC approved a new primary calendar that moves Georgia's earlier — though Gov. Brian Kemp previously said he wouldn't support the move.
Friday onPolitical Rewind: The Legislature is picking up steam. Bills that would block a federal website for insurance in favor of a state site, authorize sports betting, and approve a statue of Clarence Thomas are in the air. Meanwhile, a federal judge rules on the mass challenge of Georgia voters.
The Alzheimer’s Music Festival was started a decade ago by a musician who stepped back from his career in his mid 20s to care for his father, who was diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s. The 10th annual show is Saturday at Atlanta's Buckhead Theatre.
Thursday on Political Rewind: On a special edition of the show, host Bill Nigut welcomes investigative journalists Alan Judd and Willoughby Mariano to the show to discuss their series "Dangerous Dwellings," an investigation into rundown apartment complexes and their effects on residents.