Armed police have been called after a man was seen staggering across a street “covered in blood”.
The firearms officers remain in Cornwall Gardens in Canterbury following a suspected stabbing just this morning.
Also in today’s podcast, police have managed to recover a second memorial plaque that was stolen from a Kent churchyard.
It’s after two metal plaques listing the names of men who died in the First World War were taken from a churchyard in Chatham last week.
A top Indian restaurant could have its licence stripped after a decade of hiring illegal workers on little to no pay.
Owners of Tenterden’s Badsha Indian Cuisine are accused of exercising a flagrant “disregard for immigration law” after racking up fines worth £120,000.
You can hear from elderly residents of a retirement complex in Ashford who say they face the “barbaric and inhumane” upheaval of being moved out of their homes and into temporary accommodation for two years.
Council bosses say they’re replacing the “outdated” site but the tenants say they’re worried about being “scattered” to various parts of the borough.
And we’ve spoken to the trustee of a Kent charity that’s holding a celebrity football match in Maidstone this weekend
kmfm Breakfast presenter Rob Wills is taking part in the game between Rochester City and a team of ex-pros to raise money for My Shining Star.