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Parole Officer Arrested for Burglary and Official Misconduct

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The Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office and the Indiana Department of Correction has arrested an Indiana parole officer on charges relating to Burglary, Obstruction and Official Misconduct.

On April 30, 2020 the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office developed information indicating that Indiana State Parole Officer Michael S. Dodge planned and assisted in a burglary that occurred in early December of 2019. The Sheriff’s Office obtained evidence that Dodge participated in the burglary of a residence in the Lamasco area of Evansville. During the time the burglary occurred, Dodge was armed and had been working in an “off-duty” capacity as a law enforcement officer.

Investigators with the Sheriff’s Office and the Department of Correction arranged for Dodge to meet them at the Sheriff’s Operations Center Tuesday afternoon under the pretense of planning for a high risk warrant service. At the beginning of the meeting Dodge was placed under arrest and disarmed. During an interview, Dodge admitted to his involvement in the burglary and cooperated with investigators.

Dodge was booked into the Vanderburgh County Jail at 9:20 PM Tuesday evening and is being held on $10,000 bond.

“Anytime there’s an allegation of criminal action involving a member of the Department of Correction we assign our own investigative personnel to work directly with our local law enforcement partners”, said James Basinger, Deputy Commissioner of Operations for the IDOC. “This joint agency cooperation helps ensure a thorough investigation to identify those who violate the public trust and hold them accountable for their alleged criminal acts.”

The Indiana Department of Correction confirmed that Dodge had been employed as a parole officer since June of 2016 and will be suspended without pay, pending termination of his employment.

Sheriff Dave Wedding stated, “I would like to thank the Department of Correction for their assistance with this investigation. Our two agencies have always worked extremely well together, and that will continue. Thankfully misconduct such as this is rare. The public should have confidence that local and state law enforcement agencies will always hold their personnel accountable

Michael S. Dodge (pictured above), 41, of Fort Branch. Burglary as a Level 4 Felony, Official Misconduct as a Level 6 Felony, Attempted Obstruction of Justice as a Level 6 Felony, Theft as a Level 6 Felony

Presumption of Innocence Notice: The fact that a person has been arrested or charged with a crime is merely an accusation. The defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.

UNSHELTERED: Creating art from home in 2020

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UNSHELTERED: Creating art from home in 2020
Share what you’ve been creating at home. The Art’s Council’s first exhibition following the end of shelter in place orders is a reflection on your experience of the world during Covid-19 quarantine. All media and themes are welcome, but please only submit work that has been completed in 2020.
The entry fee for this exhibit is what each artist can afford, even if that is nothing. If you cannot give anything right now, please consider becoming a member or donating at a time when you can.
Please visit https://www.artswin.org/members for more information on how to donate or become a member.
Registration Deadline:
Monday, June 1st by 4 p.m.
Exhibit Dates:
June 16th – July 31st
Please click the link below for more information:

CURRENT LINK INDIANA STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

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LINK OF INDIANA STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

https://www.in.gov/isdh/28470.htm

Gov. Beshear: Kentucky Will Defeat COVID-19

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Gov. Beshear: Kentucky Will Defeat COVID-19

FRANKFORT, Ky. (May 5, 2020) – Gov. Andy Beshear said Tuesday that Kentuckians will defeat the novel coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) by learning from the Greatest Generation and employing the qualities of personal responsibility.

“Those qualities of personal responsibility are critically important. My actions and how they impact other people, I am responsible for,” Gov. Beshear said. “Of integrity. Of knowing, we do not get days off when it comes to this virus, and knowing the impact that we can have on others. Work ethic. We have to have the work ethic to complete our task and to come out of this having protected those around us. Finally, faithful commitment. We are fully committed to defeating this virus. We are going to faithfully continue to do what it takes. This is our moment in history, and people’s lives depend on us.”

Teacher Appreciation Week
Gov. Beshear hailed the work of Kentucky’s great educators during Teacher Appreciation Week and Teacher Appreciation Day, May 5.

“We so appreciate the job our teachers are doing,” said Gov. Beshear. “What teachers have done in this time of crisis is truly amazing. From preparing work for children to complete at home to help deliver food – thank you.”

Case information
As of 5 p.m. May 5, Gov. Beshear said there were at least 5,822 coronavirus cases in Kentucky, 625 of which were newly confirmed Tuesday. More than 300 of the positive cases were from testing at Green River Correctional Complex.

Unfortunately, Gov. Beshear also reported 14 new deaths Tuesday, raising the state’s toll to 275 deaths related to the virus. Many of those deaths were related to long-term care facilities, the Governor said.

The deaths include a 79-year-old man and an 89-year-old woman from Boone County; an 85-year-old man from Henderson County; a 77-year-old man from Hopkins County; two women, ages 59 and 70, from Jackson County; two men, ages 35 and 91, and two women, ages 63 and 69, from Jefferson County; and three women, ages 86, 88 and 96, and a 94-year-old man from Kenton County.

At least 2,058 Kentuckians have recovered from the virus. The number of Kentuckians tested is at least 61,013.

Dr. Steven Stack, the commissioner of the Kentucky Department for Public Health (KDPH), said focused testing in confined populations, like long-term care facilities, meatpacking, and processing facilities and prisons, can often have much higher positivity rates once the infection enters the community.

“We are about to embark on a very aggressive program to test the long-term care facilities over the weeks ahead at a very brisk pace,” Dr. Stack said. “Thank you for what you have done, but I have to continue to emphasize that we must continue these efforts even as we are trying to ease health care back into a better level of functionality and even as the Governor has announced the Phase 1 reopening plan. The normal we return to will be a new normal. It will not be the same normal we left until we get access to a vaccine or until we get access to a fantastic treatment or cure.”

Dr. Stack also noted that Perdue Farms would be taking the necessary steps to test employees.

For additional information, including up-to-date lists of positive cases and deaths, as well as breakdowns of coronavirus infections by county, race and ethnicity, click here.

Green River Correctional Complex
Gov. Beshear said mass coronavirus testing at Green River Correctional Complex was completed last week.

J. Michael Brown, secretary of the Governor’s executive cabinet, said more than 1,000 tests have been returned and the total number of positive cases linked to the facility currently stands at 342 inmates and 57 staff members.

Brown also provided an update on efforts to fight the coronavirus at the Green River Correctional Complex in Central City. To address the outbreak at the complex, the facility is dividing into housing units based on test results, contact with infected individuals, and those in a vulnerable population. Brown said temperature checks and deep sanitizing are also taking place to help reduce the spread.

“We almost have a complete snapshot of the situation at Green River which allows us to go ahead and truly plan on how to address that population,” said Brown.

Testing update; new Pikeville location
Gov. Beshear offered an update on expanding efforts to boost testing throughout the commonwealth. The Governor announced a new drive-through testing site in Pikeville, as part of a partnership with the Pike County Health Department, Gravity Labs and Pikeville Medical Center. The testing is being conducted today through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Pikeville Medical Center, 172 S. Mayo Trail in Pikeville. The site can conduct 70 tests daily and filled all of those slots today.

For more information on testing locations and how to sign up visit, kycovid19.ky.gov.

Unemployment insurance
Josh Benton, deputy secretary of the Kentucky Education and Workforce Development Cabinet, provided three updates to the state’s response to an unprecedented number of unemployment insurance claims.

He said there were changes coming to the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance.

“This is primarily for individuals who do not normally qualify for unemployment insurance,” Benton said. “There’s about 100,000 of those individuals currently receiving benefits on this program.”

He said the minimum benefit for Kentuckians on PUA is $176 per week. Recipients need to request the benefits online every two weeks. To make things easier, people can submit wage history from last year to calculate the benefits.

“In more cases than not, it’s going to increase their benefit amount above that $176 a week,” Benton said.

Second, Benton said employers will now be able to report return-to-work dates for their employees at https://kewes.ky.gov/. Benton said there were several exceptions, including for workers who are in at-risk categories or who are caring for at-risk relatives.

Finally, Benton said officials were working to clear the final claims from March and that the few remaining outstanding issues had to do with disagreements with the employer about terms of separation.

Healthy at Work
Gov. Beshear on Monday introduced new requirements for Phase 1 of Healthy at Work.

Under the schedule outlined by Gov. Beshear, more businesses will be allowed to open May 11 with new minimum requirements, as well as industry-specific requirements. Among the businesses that will be allowed to operate: Manufacturing, distribution and supply chain businesses; construction; vehicle or vessel dealerships; office-based businesses (at 50% pre-pandemic capacity; horse racing (no fans in attendance); pet care, grooming and boarding, and photography. As long as progress in the fight against COVID-19 is not threatened, additional business sectors will be allowed to open May 20 and May 25.

The Governor said that he hopes to announce Phase 2 this week. He also said that his administration is working with faith leaders on guidance for houses of worship. The guidance has not been issued yet.

“Just because May 20 you can potentially reopen, doesn’t mean that you should,” Gov. Beshear said. “It has to be done safely. Our faith leaders have asked me to reiterate this – you should trust your faith leader in your congregation about when it is going to be safe to resume.”

Giving Tuesday
To honor Giving Tuesday, Gov. Beshear urged Kentuckians who can to give to the Team Kentucky Fund.

More information
Read about other key updates, actions, and information from Gov. Beshear and his administration at governor.ky.gov, kycovid19.ky.gov and the Governor’s official social media account Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

Kentuckians can also access translated COVID-19 information and daily summaries of the Governor’s news conference at tinyurl.com/kygovespanol (Spanish) and tinyurl.com/kygovtranslations (more than 20 additional languages).

Mayor’s Reopen Evansville Task Force

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MAYOR’S REOPEN EVANSVILLE TASK FORCE

Chairman: Deputy Mayor Steve Schaefer

LISTED BELOW IS A LIST THAT THE WORKPLACE SAFETY AND TESTING SUBGROUP COMPILED OF BUSINESSES PROVIDING PPE

Mid America Fire and SafetySurgical Masks, KN95, Mask, Hand Sanitizer
812-423-5505

Indiana Safety and Supply-Surgical Mask, KN95, Mask, Gloves, Gowns, Goggles, Safety Glasses, Hand Sanitizer
812-257-0499 Ext. 225

Boyd & Sons Machinery-Hand Sanitizer
800-443-3909

Marshall Glove And Safety-Gloves Only
812-425-5167

Anchor Industries-Reusable Cloth Mask
877-959-2366

Tri-State Systems, Inc.-Surgical Mask, Faceshields
812-455-5829

Don’s Claytons-Free Cloth Masks
registry@dci-cleaners.com

US21 Inc- Surgical Mask, KN95, Mask, Gloves, Gowns, Goggles, Hand Sanitizer
703-560-0021 X 128

Legion Star-Surgical Mask, KN95, Mask, Gloves, Suits, Hand Sanitizer
561-866-2886

Cool Breeze Vapor –2 oz Pocket Size Hand Sanitizer
812-449-8358

Oswald Marketing –Disposable Masks, KN95 Masks, Reusable Cloth Masks, Face Covers, Hand Sanitizers Safety Glasses, Digital Thermometers
812-426-0335

Golden West Industrial Supply- Gowns, Faceshields, Mask, Gloves, Safety Glasses, Hand Sanitizer, Wipes
310-403-6499

KRS, Kleen-Rite Supply- Disinfectants, Hand Sanitizers and Stations, Gloves, Effective Microfiber Solutions, Bath Tissue, Disposable Paper Products
812-422-7483

El Tigre Golf Seats-Cotton Face Shields
574-596-0010

Q Health- KN95 Respirators (FDA, CE, and CDC Certified), 3-Ply Surgical Masks (FDA, CE Certified), Medical Face Shields
775-530-6844

NeuroHarmonix, LLC 765-215-8388

BW Development- KN95 Mask, Gel Hand Sanitizer, Gloves
317-588-1789

Fasnap Corp.-Non-medical face masks, CH-95 Filtered Facepiece Respirators (FFR), CH-95 Filtered Facepiece Respirators (FFR)
800-624-2058

Advocate Consulting Group, LLC –Bulk hand sanitizer
317-697-6112

ICC Business Products-1 Gallon Jugs of Hand Sanitizer
317-697-6112

CPR Savers & First Aid Supply-Gowns, hand sanitizer, latex gloves, earloop masks
480-436-5121

Shelterit-Surgical mask, KN95, N95, Nitrile Gloves, Protection Isolation Mask
203-824-6200

Pure Balance LLC -Masks, Protective Face Shields, Thermometers, Hand Sanitizer, Protective Glasses, Protective Visors
818-617-4098

ICC Business Products –Disposable Face Mask, KN95 Masks, Anti-Fog Adult size Goggles, One-time use, Disposable Forehead Thermometer Testing Strip, Non-Contact Infrared Forehead Thermometer
317-697-6112

EBN Industrial Supply –812-477-0077

Altstadt’s- 812 425-3393

American Sanitary –812-426-0201

DiVal Safety Equipment –812-464-5916

Ferguson Facilities Supply- 317-709-3632

Grainger Industrial Supply-800-472-4643

Smith & Butterfield-Cloth Mask, Gloves, Hand Sanitizer
812-422-3261

Johnstone Supply- 812-422-7575

Cintas First Aid and Safety –812-250-1933

Kor-X-All Company-812-422-4191

Martin Safety Evansville-812-425-5167

Pro-Tex-All Company –812-424-8268

Stauffer Glove & Safety-215-679-4446

Communications: Noah Stubbs

Contact: reopenevansville@evansville.in.gov

Translation services provided by Vidal Plastics, LLC.

California Becomes First State To Borrow Cash From The Federal Government To Pay Out Unemployment Benefits

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California Becomes First State To Borrow Cash From The Federal Government To Pay Out Unemployment Benefits

Joseph Zeballos-Roig

Policy Reporter For Business Insider

California is the first state to borrow money from the federal government to pay unemployment benefits, The Wall Street Journal first reported on Monday.

The Journal reported that the state borrowed $348 million after receiving the green light to draw up to $10 billion until the end of July. The money can be used to pay out regular claims, which are separate from the $600 boost in federal benefits added to weekly checks for jobless Americans under the coronavirus rescue package approved in March.

Two states are set to follow suit in the coming weeks: Illinois and Connecticut.

Over 30 million people have filed for unemployment over the past two months, straining antiquated and understaffed state systems across the country. Many states are quickly depleting the trust funds used to finance the benefits, according to the Tax Foundation.

States can borrow from the federal government when they run out of money to pay claims, a move that doesn’t need congressional approval. But the money has to be paid back, which requires budget adjustments — since states generally can’t run deficits.

After the Great Recession, which ended in 2009, many states borrowed from the federal government to finance spending on their unemployment programs. Afterward, some either scaled back the duration of benefits or the amount paid out, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

The National Governors Association has called for at least $500 billion in emergency federal aid for states in the next coronavirus relief package.

Many Democrats have backed implementing another federal lifeline for states. The Washington Post reported house Speaker Nancy Pelosi said last week that Democrats would seek $1 trillion in state aid.

 

My Neighbors Hunt

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My Neighbors Hunt

        By Richard Moss, MD

of JASPER, Ind

My neighbors hunt.  They can survive in the forest, hills, lakes, and rivers, here in Indiana.  They understand the world of nature, its vicissitudes, and barbarism.  Appreciating its transcendent beauty and cadences, they also accept its fierce cruelties.  They do not worship nature.  They seek reconciliation with it that they may endure and protect their loved ones.  They admire the natural world, its towering majesty, and microscopic complexity, but they do not hold it on a pedestal, pristine, and viewed from a distance.  Theirs’ is a realistic appraisal of nature and its vagaries, and what they require to survive.  

Coming from the Bronx, I was acquainted with riding the subway or bus or navigating the busy and often treacherous streets of New York.  There I learned to survive in the city, but I knew nothing of hunting, fishing, or surviving in nature.  Coastal elites have disdain for those schooled in such things.  They assume that food, water, and other necessities and amenities just appear.  They lack awareness of the complex grids, structures, and platforms that maintain their comforts.  Or the sources of the electricity that powers their computers and air-conditioning.  Or of the gasoline that fuels their cars.  They do not appreciate those who make these daily, secular miracles possible, the commonplace wonders of modern, electronic civilization.   

Many Hoosiers preserve food.  Some steam or pressure can.  Or dehydrate, pickle, freeze-dry smoke, or sale items.  Knowing how to farm, they cope with caterpillars, aphids, and cutworms; and guard against hedgehogs, fungi, and lack of rain.  

Some have gas tanks and generators.  They have water filters, propane stoves, purifying tablets, first-aid kits, pick-up trucks, drills, hammers, and wrenches.  They can repair a car, a machine, or a leaking pipe.  And yes, they also know how to install wifi, use computers, navigate the internet, and operate smartphones.  

They have guns and ammunition.  Well trained, many are veterans, serve in the national guard, or law enforcement, and are defenders of the 2nd amendment.  They have shotguns, bolt action rifles, AR-10s, and other semi-automatics.  They own handguns and an array of shells, including expanding, home defense rounds.  Many have night vision, tree stands, bows, arrows, camouflage, trail cameras, scents, GPS devices, and 2-way radios.  They hunt duck, quail, and deer.  Floating down a river or walking the fields, they recognize the rhythms of the animals they track and pursue, their migration and trail patterns, driven by the weather, mating seasons, and food sources. 

Some love to fish.  Equipped with bait, rods, reels, nets, and spears, they cast for bluegill, catfish, and carp.  

It is a different world from city dwellers who know only of going to a grocery or ordering online.  They are ignorant of nature, although they worship it in a paganistic way, atheists as they generally are.  They believe in nothing, so they believe in everything.  Global warming concerns them though none would change their lifestyle to reduce their carbon footprint.  They are uninformed of the history of climate patterns, the solar cycles that drive the weather, the ice ages and interglacials that occurred well before the industrial age.  They blindly accept the panicked predictions of flawed Global Climate Models, not unlike the hysterical Corona Virus forecasts that called for the Black Death and forced the unnecessary crashing of our economy.  They would abhor nature if they actually had to live in it.  

But these metropolitans, gentry liberals, and globalists, scornful and sarcastic, enclosed in leftist coastal ecosystems, have their opinions confirmed daily by everyone around them.  Predictable and conformist, they hilariously imagine themselves wild and free and look down at those who know so much of nature, who can live and flourish in the wild.  Hunters, fishermen, food preservers, and preppers do not idolize the environment. They just respect it.  Such people, blue-collar types often, farmers, oil workers, mechanics, and coal miners, make the lives of the urbanites possible.  They provide them with power, goods, food, and water that they may live and sneer.  

But if the power grid went down from a solar event or an EMP (electromagnetic pulse) device, or if the economy collapsed, the denizens of flyover country would survive.  Probably not so our sophisticated urbanites.  

They would soon realize that their clever turns of phrase, condescending smirks, allegiance to “diversity,” abortion, and the rejection of God, would mean nothing before the fury of nature and nature’s God.  It would be a distant and aloof nature, whose whims had formerly been kept at bay not by Greenpeace, Sierra Club, or the ACLU, but by truckers, electricians, and refrigerator repairmen.  

Their fatal conceits would vanish in terrifying moments as nature delivered its cruel blows. Their high-minded rhetoric, progressive orthodoxy, navel-gazing, and self-absorption would dissolve before the acid rain of Gaia’s indifferent wrath.  The financiers, media types, and hip Marxist professors would not do well.  The anointed ones, the ruling class, and other pompous visionaries would descend to savagery in a war of all against all. But the country bumpkins would get by.  Some may not even blink an eye, for they already anticipated this, and had spent their lives preparing. 

In the age of Corona, a time of plague, with the economy crumbling, hospitals closing, streets emptied of life, perhaps the rootless cosmopolitans may want to reconsider their contempt.  What is certain is that our elites, in the media, academia, and elsewhere, cloistered in liberal ghettoes, amongst fellow members of the chattering class, would not survive without the welders, assembly line workers, and equipment operators.  Those whom they refer to as hicks, rubes, and deplorable who cling to their guns and Bibles.  Maybe they should thank them.  But don’t hold your breath.

FOOTNOTE:  Dr. Moss is a practicing Ear Nose and Throat Surgeon, author, and columnist, residing in Jasper, IN.  He has written A Surgeon’s Odyssey and Matilda’s Triumph available on amazon.com.  Find more of his essays at richardmossmd.com.  Visit Richard Moss, M.D. on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

The City-County Observer has posted this article without bias, opinion or editing.

Join Us For A ReOpening Stage 2 Town Hall For Retail & Restaurant/Bar Industries.

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Join Us For A ReOpening Stage 2 Town Hall For Retail & Restaurant/Bar Industries.

Current guidelines on how to reopen and maintain your business during these transitions will be discussed along with the next steps. A medical advisor from the ReOpen Evansville Task Force will be in attendance to give specifics about health and keeping your environment safe for employees and customers. You may attend either town halls. Please submit any questions ahead of time through the registration page.

REGISTER NOW FOR THE RETAIL TOWN HALL – WED. MAY 6, 8:45 AM:
https://members.swinchamber.com/events/details/reopening-stage-2-town-hall-retail-4816

REGISTER NOW FOR THE RESTAURANT/BAR TOWN HALL – WED. MAY 6, 4 PM:
https://members.swinchamber.com/events/details/reopening-stage-2-town-hall-restaurant-bar-4817

A-Zoom link will be sent out to all registrants. 

For more information about ReOpening, go to https://swinchamber.com/re-opening-back-in-business/

 

AG Curtis Hill works to strengthen enforcement efforts against illegal robocalls

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Attorney General Curtis Hill is calling on USTelecom and its Industry Traceback Group (ITG) to continue collaborating with state attorneys general by improving technological capabilities to improve enforcement against illegal robocallers. USTelecom is the leading organization representing telecommunications providers.

In a letter sent to USTelecom, Attorney General Hill and a bipartisan coalition including 51 other attorneys general urged the association to further develop robocall traceback and other tools suited to law enforcement needs.

“Every year, our office gets more consumer complaints about unwanted robocalls than just about any other issue,” Attorney General Hill said. “At best, these calls represent a nuisance for families just wanting to enjoy peace and privacy without needless disturbances interrupting their routines. At worst, they represent scams aimed at stealing people’s identities or hard-earned money.”

Collaboration, Attorney General Hill added, will be a key component of success going forward in stopping illegal robocalls.

“I am eager to continue working with our state, federal, and private-sector partners to improve the lives of all our citizens,” Attorney General Hill said.

The letter asks USTelecom to advance the ITG’s abilities in identifying robocall campaigns, trends and business ecosystems; conducting automated traceback investigations; and coordinating with relevant law enforcement agencies.

A key part of that action would be for USTelecom to develop and roll out an online platform to collect live data from carriers and robocall-blocking apps. When USTelecom or a law enforcement agency detects an illegal robocall campaign, the law enforcement agency would then be able to submit a subpoena to USTelecom in a streamlined online portal.

The process would allow for rapid review by USTelecom and provide law enforcement agencies the ability to expedite subpoena procedures and access the platform to quickly retrieve relevant data. The platform would bolster law enforcement investigations and could potentially lead to attorneys general offices issuing temporary restraining orders that could stop a live robocall campaign in its tracks.

The coalition’s letter follows a January 2020 meeting in Washington D.C. with representatives from state attorneys general offices, federal agencies and the telecom industry. Some priorities developed at that meeting include:

  • Automating and increasing the total volume of traceback investigations;
  • Alerting relevant law enforcement agencies of suspected illegal robocall campaigns;
  • Enabling law enforcement agencies to electronically upload and receive responses to subpoenas and civil investigative demands, and providing swift response to those requests; and
  • Identifying noncooperative Voice Service Providers, including those that don’t participate in the traceback process, repeatedly originate or accept illegal robocalls, or repeatedly fail to provide sufficient records.

The coalition believes these measures would strengthen the partnership between the USTelecom-backed ITG and attorneys general, a relationship that led to the creation of the Anti-Robocall Principles. Those principles were established in August 2019 when 51 attorneys general and 12 major telecom providers took aim at reducing the number of unwanted and illegal robocalls reaching the American people.

More recently — and due in part to the support from the telecommunications industry and state attorneys general — the Telephone Robocall Abuse Criminal Enforcement and Deterrence (TRACED) Act was signed into law by the federal government. This law enables the industry to develop call-authentication protocols to combat caller-ID spoofing and implement other sweeping anti-robocall measures.