Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, never stingy with superlatives or shy about boosterism, has been bragging lately in a way that has neighboring Maryland steamed. [Read more]
Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, never stingy with superlatives or shy about boosterism, has been bragging lately in a way that has neighboring Maryland steamed. [Read more]
The Potomac Nationals Baseball team will upgrade the clubhouse at Pfitzner Stadium in Woodbridge.
Prince William County taxpayers will foot the 230 thousand dollar cost for the improvements at the 30-year-old stadium. Since 2012, the team has talked about building a new stadium at Potomac Town Center behind Wegmans in Woodbridge. The project has yet to break ground.
Several area police departments are participating in this year’s National Night Out.
National Night Out is an event that promotes community-police awareness across the country, and is held by localities each year during the first week of August.
Three Woodbridge businesses on Darby Brook Court were targeted by robbers this week.
On the afternoon of July 26, Prince William police were called to Shanghai Café Chinese Cuisine for an attempted burglary.
Police in Prince William County are looking for one of their own.
William “Bill” Hurley retired as a sergeant from Prince William County in the early 2000s. Hurley left his Leesburg home Monday night in his green truck and has not been heard from since.
Construction is underway on George Mason University’s long-awaited Potomac Science Center in the Belmont Bay community of Woodbridge and is expected to be completed in the spring. [Read more].
First an Acura slammed into the front of a seven eleven store about noon on Tuesday.
[ngg_images gallery_ids=”478″ display_type=”ds-nextgen_royalslider”]
An Acura sedan slammed into the front of a 7-Eleven store.
The Quicken Loans National Tournament kicks off today at Robert Trent Jones Golf Course in Gainesville.
More than 100 PGA players, including Tiger Woods, were invited to come participate in the event.
Twenty seven years after being killed in the line of duty, Sergeant John D. Conner, III, was remembered in a ceremony last week.
On July 24, 1988, Conner was shot three times and later died after responding to a report of a man shooting bullets into the air, according to his Officer Down Memorial page. The suspect, Roy Bruce Smith, was shot in the foot and survived, but was later sentenced to death and was executed nine-years later.