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On Friday, a federal judge sentenced a Klamath Falls man convicted of kidnapping and sexually assaulting two women.
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Since the pandemic, public schools across Oregon have struggled to reach kids who are still enrolled, but just not showing up.
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In May, the Klamath County Board of Commissioners decided to cancel a library-sponsored social justice book group over concerns the programming could be perceived as political.
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Klamath County Commissioners have canceled a library-sponsored book group over what some are calling censorship. That decision could have ramifications across the library district’s programming.
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This weekend, a group of Klamath Falls residents is protesting a planned installation of a decommissioned F-15 fighter jet in a downtown city park.
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Eighteen-year-old Brody A. Hubble has been charged with assault in the fourth degree in a case involving several high schoolers from Klamath Falls.
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The Klamath County Office of Developmental Disability Services will get another investigator to look into reports of abuse against intellectually or developmentally disabled residents.
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The assault allegedly occurred in August by three members of the Klamath Falls Falcons baseball team when they were playing in a tournament in Ephrata, Washington.
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After the conclusion of a criminal investigation into an alleged sexual hazing incident, a Grant County, WA prosecutor is weighing whether to file charges against three alleged perpetrators.
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Klamath Falls is hosting its second annual pride festival on Saturday. The event’s organizers are excited despite threatening messages in recent weeks.
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City councilors in Klamath Falls voted unanimously on Monday to rename Kit Carson Park as Eulalona Park.
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The Great Resignation has come to the Klamath Falls Herald and News. All members of the four-person newsroom are leaving their jobs this week.
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A city park in Klamath Falls could soon have a new name, if residents decide to confront the history of Kit Carson, a Western frontiersman known for the expulsion and killing of local Native Americans.
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In the summer of 2020, after racial justice protests roiled Klamath Falls and many other American cities, the Klamath Falls City Council created a task force to examine local issues of racial and social fairness and advise city government on ways to make the city more equitable. Last week, the mayor and city council decided not to continue the group.