Arkansas The people rule
 
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Arkansas The people rule

Arkansas: Arkansas Law School

Officials say Medicaid drug evaluation plan saving state money By Rob Moritz LITTLE ROCK - A program designed to fight the high cost of prescription drugs, which has doubled in cost in the past five years, has saved the state Medicaid program more than $20 million since its inception two years ago, officials say.
ARKANSAS CITY — The man accused of kidnapping and killing 17-year-old Casey Crowder was denied bail Friday on capital murder and kidnapping charges, beginning a legal process that could end in a death sentence if he’s convicted.
By Brooke Vermillion-Chambers Reporter Two local officers graduated last week from the Basic Police Training Class at the Arkansas Law Enforcement Training Academy in East Camden and have started their careers in law enforcement.
By Brooke Vermillion-Chambers Reporter Though law enforcement officers face multiple challenges each day, local officers said their job has become increasingly difficult in recent years with the rise in non-English speaking residents.
AARP starts media campaign to educate voters on state candidates By Betsy Turner LITTLE ROCK - Although AARP Arkansas' new media advertisements say "Don't Vote," the organization's leaders say the real message is for Arkansans to get educated on candidates before casting a ballot.
When Bill Clinton came to Little Rock the other day to campaign for Mike Beebe - this was a couple of weeks before he reared up on Chris Wallace - he told a crowd, "In Arkansas, Democrats don't get swift-boated."
JONESBORO -- Arkansas State University pre-law graduates who go on to complete law school at University of Arkansas law schools get "the best of both worlds," according to a retired ASU professor.
ARKANSAS CITY, Ark. - A circuit judge denied bail Friday for a regional trucker from McGehee who is accused of abducting and killing a Pine Bluff girl whose car had run out of gasoline along a remote U.S. highway in southeastern Arkansas.
Back in 1994, when I first met Leland Hibdon, he was a soft-spoken, obviously shy student at Pahrump Valley high school, who was already well known in IMCA circles.
Officials say more treatment needed for women addicted and pregnant By Betsy Turner LITTLE ROCK - Additional funding for substance abuse treatment and home evaluations is needed to assist the mothers identified as using drugs while pregnant under a year-old state law, members of a work group studying the law testified Thursday.

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