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The state recently signed a contract with CoreCivic, a company that operates private prisons in Shelby and many other locations across the country.
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Billings police offer safe pickup for packages
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Starting Oct. 31, all in-person visitation to the State Prison will be suspended until further notice.
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Environmental organizations and residents near a planned natural gas plant in Laurel are fighting to stop its construction even as it proceeds.
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Marijuana dispensary owners in Great Falls have won a lawsuit against the city.
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A police officer shot and wounded a woman in the Billings Clinic emergency department Sunday evening while responding to a report of an individual with a “loaded gun” threatening to shoot herself.
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A district court judge has ordered the state health department to rescind a rule that bars transgender residents from amending the gender marker their birth certificates. The health department is defying that order.
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The future of three new Montana election laws is in the hands of a state judge. Attorneys recently concluded nine days of arguing over the laws' possible benefits and harms.
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In the trial’s final days, courtroom debate turned to the origins of the state’s three new voting laws and the case’s ties to broader conspiracies about voter fraud.
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A trial is underway in Yellowstone County over three new Montana election laws. Plaintiffs focused their first arguments on barriers to voting in Indian Country.
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Police Chief Rich St. John said at a news conference on Monday a six-year veteran of the police department shot the man in the lower abdomen as officers responded to a report of a domestic dispute between the man and a woman.
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The Montana Supreme Court has affirmed a block on a referendum that would have asked voters to elect supreme court justices in districts instead of statewide.