
Whittney Evans
Features Editor, VPM NewsWhittney Evans is VPM News’ features editor. She studied journalism and political theory at Morehead State University, where she was also a student reporter at WMKY. Before coming to VPM News in 2018, she worked for KCPW and KUER in Salt Lake City, covering politics, government, criminal justice, housing and more.
Email Whittney: [email protected]
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NPR recently reported on alleged ethics violations at Virginia’s largest law firm, McGuireWoods. The firm is accused of representing adversary clients: one a federal agency, the other a non-profit that the CEO of that federal agency was trying to defund.
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A federal appeals court will reconsider Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax’s libel lawsuit against CBS on Thursday. Fairfax accuses the television network of airing sexual assault allegations that were levied against him in 2019. The network broadcast exclusive interviews with the accusers, Meredith Watson and Vanessa Tyson, to a national audience. Both accuse Fairfax of assaulting them separately more than 15 years ago.
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Governor Ralph Northam’s administration and Attorney General Mark Herring’s office say a lawsuit filed by an employee of Virginia’s government watchdog agency is a political ploy, riddled with false accusations.
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The General Assembly has approved landmark legislation to abolish the death penalty in the Commonwealth of Virginia. Gov. Ralph Northam may sign the bill within a week.
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Richmond’s top prosecutor is facing a challenge from within her party. Commonwealth’s Attorney Colette McEachin, a Democrat, announced last month that she would seek re-election. Now Tom Barbour, a criminal defense attorney who calls himself a progressive reformer and innovator, is moving to unseat her in a June primary.
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Virginia is on track to remove a section of its constitution that defines marriage as solely between one man and one woman. The now-defunct provision enshrined the state’s ban on same-sex marriage when it was ratified in 2006.
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The Supreme Court of Virginia has agreed to take up an appeal in the Robert E. Lee Monument case.
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Virginia legislators are weighing how long law enforcement should be able to hold onto license plate data they collect using automatic license plate readers. Members of a House Public Safety Committee considered a bill Friday that would ban agencies from storing the information for more than 30 days, unless it’s being used to investigate a crime or violation.
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Virginia Democrats continued to push for legislation this session to hold law enforcement accountable for misconduct. But most of those efforts to “police the police” were cut short.
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Democrats in the General Assembly are on the way to removing mandatory minimum sentences from Virginia’s law books. It’s part of a handful of progressive criminal justice reforms they set out to tackle this session. Advocates say mandatory minimum sentences do not deter crime, as they are purported to do, and they tie the hands of judges and juries, who are expected to use discretion in sentencing.