There’s a Change in Staff at the Governor’s Office.
Governor Bentley's chief of staff, David Perry, is leaving.
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WAKA Action 8 News
by WAKA Action 8 News
Consumer Technology Reporter
Consumer Technology Reporter Jamey Tucker started providing his daily “What the Tech” stories to Action 8 News in 2019. He can be seen on Action 8 News Rising as well as Action 8 News at 5:00 and 5:30PM.
Jamey previously worked as a reporter for WKRN in Nashville, Tennessee. He was also an anchor and reporter for WREG in Memphis, Tennessee, and WHNT in Huntsville.
Jamey has been honored by the Associated Press in Alabama as Best Reporter and Best Feature reporter for his work as a religion reporter. His love for technology reporting grew while working in Nashville. Jamey now focuses entirely on technology reporting and enjoys finding new apps and gadgets to make life easier, safer and a little more fun.
Jamey and his wife have three children and are the proud owners of a hairless cat.
You can follow Jamey and submit story ideas and questions on X at @jameytucker.
Governor Bentley's chief of staff, David Perry, is leaving.
27 Montgomery Police officers have died in the line of duty. Every year, their families, friends and fellow officers honor them in a memorial service.
College football players who suffered a concussion or have been playing for a long time have less volume in the part of their brain that's important for memory.
Women who go through menopause between the ages of 40 to 45 have a 40 percent higher risk of heart failure, according to a new study in the Journal Menopause.
The C-D-C reports about half of all Americans reported taking one or more prescription drugs from 2007 to 2010.
A man critically wounded in a shooting in Montgomery has died.
U-S Marshals arrest a suspect in a deadly shooting at a Greenville pub.
A man critically wounded in a shooting Tuesday in Montgomery has died.
U.S. Marshals have arrested the man suspected of shooting another man to death at a Greenville pub over the weekend.
Both prosecutors and defense lawyers say they're ready for the sentencing of a man convicted of killing his mother-in-law at an Alabama community college campus in 2011.



