These are some of the stories central Maine is talking about today.

Republican Gov. Paul LePage has sent 65 veto messages to Maine lawmakers, even though the state's attorney general has said that he missed his chance to take action on those bills. LePage officials delivered the veto messages to the Legislature on Thursday. Lawmakers have returned to Augusta for a one day-session to finish up their work and adjourn for the year. Lawmakers and Attorney General Janet Mills say that LePage can no longer act on the bills because he held them for more than 10 days. The lawmakers said the vetoes were too late. The measures have already been chaptered into law. LePage claims that he can still veto the bills because lawmakers adjourned last month. Democrats have said that they won't consider the vetoes if LePage attempts to return them to the Legislature. (AP)

A new law makes "revenge porn" a crime. Revenge porn is when a person posts sexually explicit images of someone as retaliation and until now, it's been legal in Maine. According to WGME until recently most people hadn't even heard of revenge porn, but come mid-October it will be a misdemeanor crime, punishable by up to a year in jail and a $2,000 fine. The bill is one of 70 tied up in a dispute between legislators and the governor, who's asking the Maine Supreme Court to weigh in on whether they've become law. The bills sponsor says she's not worried because the governor assured her the issue has his support. (WGME)

Lawmakers in Augusta are wrapping up their work for the current legislative sessions but not before dealing a blow to Gov. Paul LePage. According to WMTW, LePage sent 65 veto messages to the Legislature on Thursday, but both the Democratic-controlled House and the Republican-controlled Senate told him the vetoes were too late. Democrats and some Republicans said the governor waited too long to act on the bills. However, the LePage administration contents that earlier this month, the Legislature adjourned in a way that it bought him more time. Neither the House nor the Senate took up the governor's veto messages. LePage did get a win when House Republicans helped kill a bill that would have significantly stripped the governor's power related to bonds. (WMTW)

A program that provides services for students from disadvantaged backgrounds at Kennebec Valley Community College got another five years of funding with a grant from the U.S. Department of Education. According to the KJ, KVCC announced that its TRiO Student Support Services Program, which assists more than 180 low-income, first-generation students and students with disabilities, will receive $284,745 annually over the next five years for a total grant of about $1.4 million. Besides helping those students’ four positions at KVCC are funded by the grant now. (centralmaine.com)

The man who set a record for speed hiking the Appalachian Trail has been issued three tickets for public drinking, littering and hiking with an oversized group. Scott Jurek overcame an early injury, difficult terrain in New England and sleep deprivation on the final stretch to complete the 2,189-mile run from Georgia to Maine in 46 days, eight hours. The 41-year-old ultra-marathoner from Colorado beat the old record by three hours. The Baxter State Park Authority, which oversees the park, posted a statement on its Facebook page saying Jurek's accomplishment violated park rules. In it, officials say the park does not support corporate events. The authority added it may cut ties with the Appalachian Trail. (AP)

Police in Waldoboro say they have caught the man who slashed the tires on 13 cars, including three police vehicles. Officials say they believe it happened late Tuesday night. According to WGME 35-year-old Brian Bennett slashed the tires on three of their cars Wednesday morning and slashed another 10 cars from Main Street to the School Street area. The town manager says it’s costing them money they didn't expect to spend. Bennett faces a variety of charges tonight. (WGME)

Four people are hurt after a fire in downtown Gardiner. The fire damaged several buildings and injured firefighters. According to WGME, the roof of 235 Water St. has partially collapsed and when that roof came down. The Gardiner fire chief says the fire broke out on the third floor of 235 water street at around 4:15 Thursday afternoon.  The fire quickly spread to three other buildings. Apartments make up the majority of the affected buildings but there are shops on the ground floor. There's still no word on what caused this fire and the fire marshal is working on that right now. Officials are also trying to determine how structurally sound the building is and whether it should be torn down.   (WGME/centralmaine.com)

Search and rescue operations are continuing through the night after police say a tornado hit the small Illinois town of Cameron. Police say the twister caused extensive damage Thursday evening, but no significant injuries. Now, no one except emergency personnel is being allowed in the town of about 600 people. The tornado touched down around 7:30 p.m. as a line of storms swept through an area stretching from Galesburg in western Illinois to the western suburbs of Chicago. (AP)

A Tennessee man is accused of opening fire at two military sites and killing four people before he was shot dead by police. Federal authorities are investigating whether the shootings were an act of terrorism. They say 24-year-old Kuwaiti-born Muhammad Youssef Abdulazeez first drove by a military recruiting center in Chattanooga and sprayed dozens of bullets. Then he drove to a Navy-Marine training center. That's where the four Marines were killed and a sailor was seriously wounded. (AP)

Residents in the Ukrainian village of Hrabove (HRAH'-boh-veh) are remembering the 298 people killed when a Malaysian airliner was shot down a year ago today. The residents have begun a procession to the crash site. In Canberra (KAN'-behr-uh), Australia, a plaque will be unveiled that'll be set in soil from the place where the plane went down. Thirty-eight of the victims were Australian citizens. The tragedy happened as Russia-backed rebels battled Ukrainian troops. (AP)

A Detroit woman who killed two of her four children and stored the bodies in a home freezer returns to court today to be sentenced to life in prison without parole. Thirty-six-year-old Mitchelle Blair has expressed no remorse for killing her 13-year-old daughter and 9-year-old son. An eviction crew discovered the bodies in the freezer in March. Blair pleaded guilty three weeks ago to first-degree murder. Her no-parole sentence is mandatory. (AP)

Just call it the robot hitchhiker. A robot created by two researchers in Canada is beginning its hitchhiking journey across the United States today. HitchBOT already has caught rides across Canada and Europe, and now it'll be relying on the kindness of strangers in the U.S. It begins its journey in Salem, Massachusetts, with a goal of reaching San Francisco. Along the way, researchers hope it'll stop in New York's Times Square, Mount Rushmore and the Grand Canyon. (AP)

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