Hannah France
KGOU Reporter / ProducerHannah France started her work in public radio at KBIA in Columbia, Missouri while she was a college student. During her time there, she helped develop and produce a weekly community call-in show called The Check-In, for which she and her colleagues won a Gracie Award. She graduated from the University of Missouri with a bachelor's in journalism in 2021. Hannah takes interest in a wide variety of news topics, which serves her well as a reporter and producer for KGOU. When she's not keeping up on the news, she enjoys going to farmers markets and spending time with her three-legged cat, Cowboy.
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There are several organizations in Oklahoma working to serve the new Afghan refugee population that arrived two years ago. One of the largest struggles they face is to provide one of the most basic resources—food.
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The clemency application for a death row inmate set to be executed next month includes new evidence that supports his claim he acted in self-defense.
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Tyler Jay Marshall, 36, was charged with one count of threatening to murder a United States official and another count of interstate transmission of threatening communications for posts he made on Twitter.
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More than two years after the fall of Kabul, Afghan refugees who resettled in the United States are still waiting for permanent documentation.
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Oklahoma City voters will decide whether taxpayer funds go toward a nearly one billion-dollar arena in December.
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33-year-old Lashala Taulbee-Pratt was found unresponsive in her cell on Wednesday morning by an officer who was distributing meals.
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Oklahoma State Superintendent of Public Instruction Ryan Walters testified Tuesday at a U.S. House Subcommittee Hearing about the influence of the Chinese government in American schools.
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The former Tulsa Public Schools administrator at the center of an embezzlement case that surfaced last year was charged on Monday.
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New data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows Oklahoma is among the poorest states in the country.
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The spiritual advisor for an Oklahoma death row inmate scheduled for execution next week completed a more than 120-mile walk to deliver a letter to Gov. Kevin Stitt asking for a 60-day reprieve.