A man faces federal charges in Macon for deceiving an oil company with local employees into paying him and others nearly $200,000, according to court records. Steven Lewis, who was indicted on Nov. 21 on one count of conspiring to commit bank fraud,
As 13WMAZ reported last night, accidents and hazardous roadways kept drivers stranded for hours. A jackknifed tractor-trailer on the southbound lane and a separate crash involving two tractor-trailers and a car in the northbound lane blocked traffic for hours.
Georgia is still reeling from its second snowstorm of the month, a rare one-two punch from Mother Nature that has stranded thousands of airline passengers and motorists.
While it's stopped snowing, deadly winter weather conditions aren't gone. The National Weather Service is warning of icy roads persisting in Georgia.
The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm watch for much of the central and southern Georgia area. Here's what to expect.
Shanelle Booker has been named the acting U.S. attorney for the Middle District of Georgia, becoming the first Black prosecutor and first woman to hold the top federal attorney’s position in Middle Georgia.
These schools have announced changes due to potential winter weather on Tuesday. Here's our running list of closures and changes as they stream into our newsroom.
Georgia officials are warning people to get off the roads by early Tuesday afternoon ahead of a winter storm that they’re comparing to “Snowmageddon,” the storm that paralyzed the Deep South in 2014.
Gov. Brian Kemp has declared a State of Emergency effective immediately in preparation for the freezing temperatures and winter weather expected to impact Georgia on Tuesday.
Gov. Brian Kemp has issued a state of emergency for all of Georgia over the next batch of incoming winter weather. Here's what we know.
All of Georgia remains under a state of emergency as some dangerous road conditions continue to pose a threat to drivers.
The state of Georgia is seeking another Supreme Court showdown over the Voting Rights Act. The state asked a federal appeals court to interpret the 1965 law in a way that could make it much harder to prove minority votes have been illegally diluted.