 You need a financial advisor with the freedom to focus on your specific needs. Whatever your goals, Reeve Potter can create a game plan tailored to you. Call Reeve at 432-0777 at Pikeville, Kentucky to learn more. On Tuesday, March 28th, Pikeville police arrested 24-year-old Katie Hurley at the apartment complex on Saad Avenue. She was charged with second-degree assault and endangering the welfare of a minor for attacking her mother with a meat cleaver in the presence of two children. Katie is currently being held at Pike County Detention Center. At around five o'clock this evening, our dispatch center 911 center was called about a possible stabbing at the scholar house apartments. EMS was also dispatched out due to injuries. Officers arrived on scene, and first thing you do is they assess the scene. We've got a violent crime that's happened, whether it be a knife or gun or whatever. So they have to assess the scene first. They find a lady that's been, her arm's been cut, severe wound, lots of blood loss. The EMS has dealt with that. Our officers are assessing the scene. They see a child, two children, one child is covered with blood also. So that steps it up, the stress of, I've got a hurt kid now. The victim was treated and transported to Pike Medical Center for a severe wound. The situation began after an argument regarding cleaning the apartment and custody of the children escalated to violence. Harley fled the scene and soon returned to the apartment where she was arrested without incident. The children were taken into the custody of Child Protective Services. To make sure the neighborhoods are safe, we have that response time. And our city ministration, our chief, they look at those response times. You know, they want us to be within this many minutes, this many minutes. And they look at that and see, how can we better that? How can we do that? We don't have a lot of stabs. We don't have a lot of shootings. But if we do, we can handle them. And that's why they train, train, train all the time. That's what we do. They up our equipment, like I said, they get us stuff to work with. And I've worked here, going on 18 years. And each chief, anything they've asked for to make this a better place, make it safer, make it safer. People visiting, people working here, people that live here, then they do it. And, you know, these people live in, won't work in Pivalry. They should think that, you know, I'm coming to work at a place or living in a place that put us first. And that's the good thing. We put those citizens first. Reporting from Mountain Top News, I'm Nick Colum.