IS IT TRUE JANUARY 30, 2018
House Committee Unanimously Votes to Increase Cigarette Tax, Smoking Age
House Bill 1380 increases the cigarette tax from 99 cents per pack to $2.99 per pack. $1 in revenue from each pack would go toward tobacco use prevention and education.
That same bill also increases the legal age to buy cigarettes and other tobacco products from 18 to 21.
Commentary: Bias Crimes: Hopefully, Taking This Step First Turns Out To Be Enough
By Michael Leppert
michaelleppert.com
Fort Wayne’s La’Kysha Gardner testified before a Senate Committee at the Indiana Statehouse on Tuesday morning. She had a compelling story to tell about an assault on her son, Jason, and what appears to be an under-reaction to it by Allen Superior Court.
Gardner explained to the Senate Corrections and Criminal Law Committee that the assault was racially motivated and that it was a clear example of a hate or bias crime. The committee was considering Senate Bill 418, which is legislation designed to create sentencing aggravators in crimes that occur with an element of bias. One would think she was there to testify in support of the bill. But not so.
“I oppose this bill because it’s just not enough,†Gardner said. Many could argue that she has a point. At least as it pertains to the crime against her son.
I wish that was the dilemma that the General Assembly is facing, but it’s not. The legislature is not struggling with whether passing Senate Bill 418 goes far enough. They are struggling over whether they should do anything on the topic at all.
The bill’s author, Sen. Sue Glick, R-LaGrange, has filed a similar version of the bill three consecutive years. I remember in 2016 with regard to her first bill, when she said something remarkably simple about the whole thing. She said, “this is something we can do.â€
Yes. It is.
So what does it do? The bill would allow for judges to consider the element of bias in the commission of a crime as an aggravating factor at sentencing. That means that if someone is convicted of a Class A misdemeanor, a judge could consider the element of bias through a preponderance of evidence presented when issuing the sentence. The sentence would still need to stay within the statutory sentencing guidelines of Class A misdemeanors.
This “aggravator†can be used if the crime was committed “with the intent to harm or intimidate an individual because of the individual’s perceived or actual†characteristics. The characteristics listed are ones you would expect: race, religion, color, sex, gender identity, disability, national origin, ancestry, sexual orientation, or ethnicity.
There are no new crimes being established. There are no “thought police†being created. It does not favor whites over blacks, gays over straights, or Jews over Christians. It simply allows a prosecutor to argue, after a conviction, that the sentence should consider bias as an element in any direction within the items on the list.
SB 418 is not a panacea perfectly designed to eradicate hate-based crime from our state. There is no such legislative idea available. While I appreciate the enormity of what Gardner and her family have experienced in the last year, no new law will erase it. Or prevent it from happening again.
I wish there was such an idea.
As Glick said two years ago, what is being proposed is something we can do. Maybe it’s a baby step, or maybe it’s “half a loaf.â€Â But there are some other small measures on big issues in my career that come to mind as transformational.
I think of smoking bans that did not include casinos. I actually quit smoking the very month that Indianapolis’ local ban went into effect. Did it help me quit smoking? Absolutely it did.
Last year, the General Assembly was being lobbied to spend $100 million dollars on pre-kindergarten expansion in its biennial budget. They only coughed up $44 million. Will it help? Absolutely it will.
I have this debate with guns rights people all of the time. I do not believe there is a law that will end gun violence in America. But I do believe there are things we can do to make progress toward that goal. Doing nothing is the most offensive strategy available because the status quo is intolerable.
But Gardner also said in her testimony: “I am a Hoosier but I wish that I wasn’t.†I found myself nodding in the chairs behind her when she said it. I agree the justice system in Indiana did not treat her family right. But I disagree that killing SB 418 is the answer to our state’s shortcomings.
SB 418 is something we can do.
It would be an embarrassment to still be one of five states without a bias crime law when this session ends in March. We might be one of four if Georgia passes a bill that is pending in their statehouse.
Though it may not be enough for La’Kysha and Jason Gardner, passing this law using the momentum of the injustice they have experienced will make many of us glad they are Hoosiers.
Finding a way to convince them to stay here is also something I think we can do. We all should try.
Footnote: Michael Leppert is a public and governmental affairs consultant in Indianapolis and writes his thoughts about politics, government and anything else that strikes him at Contrariana.com.
Posted by the City county observer without opinion, bias or editing.
Press Freedom Bill For Student Journalists Advances
By Erica Irish
TheStatehouseFile.com
 INDIANAPOLIS — Anu Nattam, editor-in-chief of Plainfield High School’s news magazine, told the House Education Committee Thursday that her staff, for the first time in 20 years, is facing censorship by the school’s administration.
After publishing the first issue of the year, “Plainfield High School’s Dating Survival Guide,†Nattam said there was immediate and unexpected negativity from school leaders.
The current name of the publication — The Shakeout — was not chosen by the staff. After their first issue in October, their principal noted that its original name — The Shakedown — had mafia connotations. He soon ordered them to find a new title.
“So far, they’ve made pretty minor changes,†Nattam said. “But it’s going to be like a snowball effect. If they’re changing this now, what are they going to change later?â€
Though Nattam does not plan on becoming a professional journalist, she said her work still deserves the necessary freedom to capture the truth in student life.
That is why she and dozens of students from Indiana high schools traveled to the Statehouse Thursday to hear and testify on House Bill 1016, authored by Rep. Ed Clere, R-New Albany.
HB 1016, which passed out of the committee by a 9-2 vote, would require administrators and student media advisers to set guidelines for student journalists and their publications.
“This legislation leaves school officials with a high level of control. School officials hire the teachers and make the rules,†Clere said. “All this does is help ensure when students and teachers play by the rules, the important speech will not be censored just because it makes government officials uncomfortable because of the information or topics presented.â€
Clere said student journalists have a special importance to a school community in that they can capture the truth in the experiences of their peers.
In The Shakeout‘s first issue, Nattam said some of these important issues included LGBTQ+ interests, dating violence and how to find a lasting relationship.
“There was really nothing unlawful in that issue,†Nattam said. “But, because a school board member felt uncomfortable about it, now we are under prior review and have to show everything we publish to administrators, people who have no experience in journalism.â€
Plainfield Community Schools declined to comment on Nattam’s testimony.
Rep. Jim Lucas, R-Seymour, told Nattam to be proud of defending her constitutional rights.
Rep. Edward Clere, R-New Albany, listens to testimony on House Bill 1016, which he authored. Photo by Eddie Drews, TheStatehouseFile.com
“I take it the reason you’re up here is that you’re upset your constitutional rights are being infringed,†Lucas said. “It’s good to see you and so many people up here fighting for your constitutional rights.â€
Dr. J.T. Coopman, executive director of the Indiana Association of Public Schools, offered a different perspective.
“School-sponsored publications are a public relations tool, but without the guidance and oversight from the administration, a school-sponsored publication can become a public relations nightmare,†Coopman said.
Lisa Tanselle, general counsel for the Indiana School Boards Association, echoed claims made by other organizations, saying a student’s rights should be limited because there are “alternative avenues†for voicing concerns to an administration, such as through social media.
“We are talking about a balancing act,†Tanselle said. “No right is pure. The court has already struck that balance between the right of a student and the right of a school administrator.â€
Of the school representatives who testified, some said there is a harmonious relationship between administrators and student media in their schools.
David Clark, the principal of Columbus North High School, said journalism programs can only thrive with a trusting administration.
“Everyone believes that students should be responsible, so let’s create an environment where they can learn to do just that. Shouldn’t we proactively educate by creating an environment of thoughtfulness and trust? It works,†he said.
Students of Plainfield High School students are among the many who turned out for HB 1016. Photo by Claire Castillo TheStatehouseFile.com
Though only two members voted against HB 1016, several who voted yes raised concerns.
Rep. Sheila Klinker, D-Lafayette, and Rep. Jack Jordan, R-Bremen, both said they wanted to see more clarification in the bill’s language. Klinker proposed amending the bill to gain more support from administrators currently in opposition to HB 1016.
Rep. Woody Burton, R-Whiteland, and Rep. Tony Cook, R-Cicero, voted no.
While Cook voted yes on last year’s version of the bill, he changed his vote this session after saying HB 1016 does not do enough to unite administrators and student media.
Last session, the bill’s predecessor passed in both the House Education Committee and in the House. It later died in the Senate.
Clere said that HB 1016 is especially relevant this session. The Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier decision turns 30 this month, signaling a decades-long run for the landmark case that put high school journalism under a different set of rules.
For Clare, the consequences of the Hazelwood decision deprive student journalists of a rigorous, real-world environment.
“The stronger the censorship, the weaker the education,†Clere said.
FOOTNOTE: Erica Irish is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
NEW HARMONY COMMISSIONER CLAIMS COUNTY COULD LOSE TAX
NEW HARMONY COMMISSIONER CLAIMS COUNTY COULD LOSE TAX
by Dan Barton, Publisher of the New Harmony Gazette January 28, 2018
At a recent New Harmony Town Council Meeting the subject of county real estate taxes was brought up by Plan Commission member Annette Buckland. It appears that Commissioner Buckland is of the belief that if properties in the Business Historic District remain eligible for mixed use, especially allowing first-floor residence as is now allowed, then it will eventually cause a dramatic downturn in tax revenue for Posey County. Not necessarily so! This is yet another unsubstantiated non-fact claim by a supporter of an attempt to change the reliable old Chapter 17 of the Town Ordinance.
As has been brought up many times in the New Harmony Gazette, there is a false fear that some Commission members have of the commercial downtown being taken over by first floor residences. Verifiable facts surrounding this claim have never been borne out.
Now, Tax Fears! Here’s what I learned concerning taxes. Commissioner Buckland’s argument orbits around the belief that these residences will cause a reduction in the tax rate on buildings, from the commercial rate to residential rates, thus causing a revenue loss to the County. She mistakenly asserted that they would drop from 3% to 2%. That is incorrect. The rate would drop from 2.0574% to 2%, but only for the portion of the building that is being used as a residence.
There are currently only two buildings, identified by the Commission, in the Business Historic District out of 25 that reflect any residential use now or in the history of our town. One reported example, on Church Street, was said to be used part-time in that manner. Only one-third of the entire square footage of the building in question is being used. A little over 500 square feet is being applied to residential use.
To satisfy my curiosity about the accuracy of Commissioner Buckland’s claim, I took a trip down to the County Assessors office in Mt. Vernon. As I indicated above, I found that the rate change is marginal at best. Also when a building is converted from straight commercial to mixed-use, commercial/residential, the building can be reassessed by the County. That reassessment would note any improvements to the building for residential use and could likely increase the buildings assessed value, increasing the total tax on the property.
A mock-up of a property such as the one on Church Street, one that the Commission has brought up several times, was done. As it turned out, not counting any improvements, the assessment value as mixed-use would go up a total of $3,700. Even so, the County, according to the mock-up calculations, would only take a loss of $50 per year. However, if there were a surge in properties being sold or used as residential/commercial, then the county would make up the tax loss by reassessments. As the market pushes up the price of these buildings due to greater residential demand, so the assessed value would increase. Making up any small losses, like is shown above.
The other surprise, that I learned, was that these small losses taken by Posey County on the mixed-use downtown property do not compare to the larger losses they take due to the many non- profit, off the tax roll properties, held in New Harmony and in the Business Historic District.
I certainly have not done a survey of these properties or calculated what the entire county loss might be, but one building at 520 Main Street, that’s counted among them, was researched. The 520 Main Street building is a non-taxed property being used as a museum, not a retail storefront. This building, according to the Assessor’s Office and County Treasurer’s Office, creates a loss of $1492 per year to the County. It’s off the tax rolls completely. A far greater loss than $50 per year on the mixed-use commercial/residential property on Church Street. Nearly 30 times greater. This gives you some idea of the real comparative losses in the county regarding these different types of property. Now I’m all for non-profit entities. But we need to keep our arguments about tax losses and building uses in perspective, and above all, accurate.
The other property type that was brought to my attention, during the County Office visit, was a special type of property that we have seen on the increase over the last few years: Bed and Breakfasts. These businesses not only function as business properties but also as personal residences of the owners in many cases. At the same time, though fulfilling a commercial use, the County tells me that they are taxed at a residential rate. The lower 2% rate that was pointed out by Commissioner Buckland.
Why compare all of these different kinds of properties, their tax rates, and tax exemptions, you might be asking? Because each property – Non-Profit Tax Exempt, Bed and Breakfast and First Floor Residential – all contribute something to the economy of New Harmony, each in a different way. Supporting restrictive laws on any one type of property, such as first-floor residential, in the New Harmony Business Historic District is no more needed than laws that would bar Non- Profit Tax Exempt properties from Main Street or advocating higher taxes or a moratorium on Bed and Breakfasts. It would not make good business sense for New Harmony. Let the market decide these issues – not bureaucrats.
There is no residential takeover of the commercial district by residential properties and the tax loss remark sounds like just another mistaken claim by another misguided supporter of an unneeded amendment.
One avid reader of the New Harmony Gazette wrote recently: “I guess I am confused as to the harm that First Floor residences have on business districts. Any residences on any floor improve downtown businesses, as can be seen in any European City. Duuuhh… the more people who live downtown, the more business they bring…. regardless of whether they live on the first floor or second… or third! Why limit where they can live?†Signed: Doc
I take comfort in knowing that there’s at least one person reading the Gazette who sees my point. Thanks, Doc!
EPD Welcomes Five New Officers to the Force
EPD Welcomes Five New Officers to the Force
There was also a special merit award given to an officer seriously injured while on duty.
Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke was in attendance and thanked the officers for their work.
Police Chief Billy Bolin says the new recruits still have ways to go before they’re ready.
Police Chief Billy Bolin said, “We are going to put a lot of stress of them in the classroom having them run through scenarios with their decision making, and teaching them how we want them to make decisions.â€
The five officers will go through several phases of training to prepare them for their new roles.
The ceremony also recognized three promotions in the department; two were promoted to Lieutenant and one was promoted to Sergeant.
United Hebrew Institute by Pat Sides
In the early twentieth century, the Evansville city directory listed three Jewish congregations. One was the Adath Israel congregation, which had built a new synagogue in 1904 on NW Sixth Street, a block from Central High School.
A newspaper reported in 1916 that local churches were “unusually active†that year building or expanding their places of worship, including Adath Israel; it erected the United Hebrew Institute at the rear of the synagogue around the corner on Vine Street.
The spacious Institute leased rooms to the new Evansville College, which held its first classes there in 1919. The synagogue was vacated in 1955 when the congregation moved to the 3700 block of Washington Avenue, and the buildings were razed in 1968.
Judge Declines Recusal In Fraudster Durham’s Case
Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
Indiana Southern District Chief Judge Jane Magnus-Stinson has denied a motion for her recusal in a civil case against convicted fraudster Tim Durham, determining her relationships with leaders of Indiana’s Democratic Party did not create the appearance of or actual bias.
Durham – who was convicted in 2012 on numerous fraud and conspiracy counts in connection with his Ohio-based company, Fair Finance – filed a motion to dismiss his 50-year federal sentence in the related civil case in October 2017. He also filed a motion the same month for Magnus-Stinson’s recusal from the civil case, arguing her personal relationships with former Indiana Gov. Evan Bayh and Indianapolis Mayor Bart Peterson — Durham’s alleged political foes — made it impossible for her to fairly hear the remainder of the case.
In his 37-page motion for recusal, Durham wrote the “business and political life of Durham and Magnus-Stinson have intersected in very negative ways over the past several decades.†He alleged Magnus-Stinson was a staunch supporter of the Democratic Party, while his leadership in the Indiana Republican Party led to the ouster of Democrats, including Bayh and Peterson, in favor of former Gov. Mitch Daniels, former Mayor Greg Ballard and former Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi, all Republicans.
Durham went on to write that Magnus-Stinson “owed†her career to Peterson and, in particular, Bayh, for whom she worked as legal counsel and deputy chief of staff, and who recommended her for appointment to the federal bench. Thus, because of her close relationships with the two high-profile politicians, he alleged she could not preside over his civil case without the appearance of bias, or actual bias.
Additionally, Durham alleged he executed a “hostile takeover and ouster†of the board of Brightpoint, Inc., a local cell phone distributor run with Robert Wagner as its director. The chief judge had worked for Wagner right out of law school and has publicly referred to him as her mentor, a relationship that indicates her actual and apparent bias, Durham said.
Next, Durham alleged Magnus-Stinson’s comments during his trial and at his sentencing demonstrated her bias and animosity toward him. He pointed specifically to her response to a question from the jury, which asked for guidance on where to find evidence involving one of the wire fraud counts against him.
Magnus-Stinson told the jury the court could not answer that question, a response Durham claims was born of the fact that the judge knew there was insufficient evidence to support that particular count. Though a jury convicted him, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals later reversed that and another wire fraud conviction against him.
Then, when the criminal case proceeded to sentencing, Magnus-Stinson “commented extensively and derogatorily about Durham’s affluent lifestyle,†including a comment that he felt “entitled to a lifestyle that involved two airplanes, several yachts, these cars that were allegedly owned by Fair investors… .â€
The chief judge’s negative opinions toward Durham were not formed during his criminal trial, he wrote, but instead had been developed over multiple decades as a result of her relationships with local political leaders. Thus, the comments indicated both her actual and apparent bias, he said.
Finally, Durham alleged Magnus-Stinson played an improper role in the selection of his counsel in connection with his resentencing motion. Durham wrote in his recusal motion that the chief judge relied on Monica Foster, executive director of the Indianapolis Federal Public Defender’s Office, to select his attorney.
According to Durham, Magnus-Stinson and Foster were law school classmates and are now “close friends.†Each appointment Magnus-Stinson made was on Foster’s recommendation, he wrote, and two of those appointments recused themselves due to conflicts of interest. The court denied Durham’s motion for resentencing less than a year after the 7th Circuit reversed his two wire fraud convictions.
Durham also took aim at Foster’s husband, Indianapolis attorney Bob Hammerle, whom Durham alleged “expressed his utter disdain for Brizzi and his alliance with Durham†and his “extreme confidence that all of Magnus-Stinson’s rulings were … absolutely beyond reproach.â€
“It seems that every associate of Magnus-Stinson is not only prejudiced against Durham, but they are openly hostile toward him,†he wrote. “In fact, if Magnus-Stinson is not biased or prejudiced against Durham, she is the only one in her circle who is not.â€
In addition to actual and apparent bias, Durham also alleged Fifth Amendment due process violations if the chief judge did not recuse herself from his case. In her initial response, Magnus-Stinson admitted to her relationships with the individuals Durham referenced, but maintained she had no knowledge of their animosity toward Durham, or of his political actions against them.
She then randomly reassigned the case in November, sending it to Judge Tanya Walton-Pratt. Pratt found “a lack of evidence to show any actual bias on the part of Judge Magnus-Stinson toward Durham,†but left the question of apparent bias open for Magnus-Stinson to resolve.
The chief judge determined in a Jan. 26 opinion that her personal friendships, trial comments and appointment of counsel did not give the appearance of bias toward Durham, nor did those factors create a due process violation. She noted that on two critical issues in the civil case — whether it should be stayed pending Durham’s appeals in the criminal case, and the calculation of disgorgement — were resolved in his favor. The chief judge agreed to stay the case, and ordered him to pay only $1.3 million in disgorgement, compared to the more than $200 million the Securities and Exchange Commission had sought.
“Finally, the Court notes that if such an allegedly obvious bias was anticipated by Mr. Durham, it would seem prudent to have sought recusal immediately, rather than litigate this case for over six years (including obtaining a summary judgment ruling) prior to seeking recusal,†she wrote.
The case is Securities and Exchange Commission v. Timothy S. Durham, James F. Cochran, and Rick D. Snow, 1:11-cv-00370.