This is Louisville’s third mass shooting this year. At this time, police do not have a suspect or a motive. Anyone with information is asked to call LMPD.
On Saturday, the organization revealed the Deana Eckert Community Room, a place for people to feel her enthusiasm, passion, and the warmth of her smile.
Wearing a smile and giving well-wishers a thumbs up, 26-year-old LMPD Officer Nick Wilt exited the Frazier Rehabilitation Institute displaying the hope and determination that doctors said has made his recovery nothing short of remarkable.
For the first time, the family of the young officer who put strangers’ lives before his own during the mass shooting at Old National Bank talked about their gratitude, heartache and hope.
Barrick’s friends have organized a Bourbon Raffle where all of the proceeds will go directly to a trust for the Barrick family, according to a release.
Staff from Kennedy Montessori Elementary School YMCA CEP Program dropped off homemade cards and pins created by students to say thank you to Wilt as he recovers.
Thursday morning, the parents of the shooter will be on the Today Show. They told anchor Savannah Guthrie that there were no warning signs their son would become violent.
The family said Wilt’s recent progress has been promising and that they’ve received some positive news from doctors on Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday morning.
Old National CEO asks the community to help keep the memories of those killed alive by “loving more, caring more deeply and supporting one another unconditionally.”
A new sign that can be seen in Jeffersontown is honoring the Louisville Metro Police officer who was critically injured in a mass shooting two weeks ago.
In the update, Wilt’s brother said that pneumonia is a common illness contracted while being on a ventilator and that doctors and nurses are working to treat it.