The Vanderburgh County Redevelopment Commission will meet on Wednesday, July 10, 2013 at 9:00 a.m. in Room 307 of the Civic Center Complex located at 1 N.W. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. to consider, among other things, a proposed Memorandum of Understanding regarding a shell building to be constructed within the Vanderburgh Industrial Park, proposed Resolutions determining the 2014 budget year TIF revenues and notices to overlapping taxing units regarding certain issues relating to TIF revenues.
Traffic Cameras (Robo-Cops) Unleash Chaos in Ohio
ELMWOOD PLACE, OH — This little village had a big problem.
Each day, thousands of cars – sometimes as many as 18,000 – rolled along Elmwood Place’s streets, crossing the third-of-a-mile town to get to neighboring Cincinnati or major employers in bustling suburbs or heavily traveled Interstate 75. Many zipped by Elmwood Place’s modest homes and small businesses at speeds well above the 25 mph limit.
Bedeviled by tight budgets, the police force was undermanned. The situation, villagers feared, was dangerous.
Then the cameras were turned on, and all hell broke loose.
Like hundreds of other U.S. communities big and small, Elmwood Place hired an outside company to install cameras to record traffic violations and mail out citations.
In the first month after the cameras began operating, late last year, 6,600 tickets went out – more than triple the village’s population. Before some unsuspecting drivers realized it, they had racked up multiple $105 citations they would learn about when their mail arrived weeks later. Some 70 parishioners, or more than half the congregation at Our Lady of Lavang Catholic Community Church, were ticketed on one Sunday last September.
Soon, there was a Facebook page promoting a boycott of the village, a petition drive against cameras, and a lawsuit against the village that threatened to wreck Elmwood Place financially. Four council members resigned. And an atmosphere of distrust and uneasiness hung over a village that traced its roots back to the 19th century, before traffic cameras or even automotive traffic.
“I think Elmwood Place tried to do something, but maybe not in the right way,” said Catherine Jones, who brought a chair and small table out of her namesake Southern-style restaurant on a recent afternoon and sat in the sun as she read her Bible and wrote out notes about the verses.
Just last year, she recalled, a pedestrian was hit and killed a couple blocks from her restaurant, near an elementary school. So she understood that something had to be done. But now she is among many small business owners worried that the cameras have given the village a speed-trap stigma.
Few things will rile citizens quicker than getting tickets in the mail, along with photos of their vehicles under a red light. The letters usually inform them they will not be assessed traffic violation “points”; nor will their insurance company be contacted. But they must pay up, or face a collection agency and damage to their credit ratings.
Supporters of camera enforcement say they stretch law enforcement resources, and they usually result in safer driving and thus save lives. Opponents see cameras giving governments a way to grab more money from taxpayer pockets, putting local policing in the hands of remote, for-profit companies, and taking society another step toward an Orwellian state of constant surveillance for misbehavior.
In Arizona, where two large photo enforcement companies are based, red-light and speed enforcement cameras have been a matter of contention for years. Gov. Jan Brewer scuttled a state program that put speed-enforcement cameras on freeways and interstates in 2010 when a contract expired; efforts to ban the devices used by many cities and towns are a yearly fixture in the Legislature.
In February, San Diego followed Los Angeles and Pasadena in dropping traffic camera citations; the mayor said they bred disrespect for the law because residents believed they were meant to make money, not reduce accidents. Legislation to require communities to get state permits before installing traffic cameras stalled this year in Iowa, while a group called Stop Big Brother has been trying to head off cameras in Iowa City.
There are 12 states that ban speed cameras, and nine prohibit red-light cameras.
Yet despite the critics and complaints, camera use is growing overall. The New York state legislature this month approved installing speed cameras in New York City school zones. Communities with traffic cameras, or automated enforcement, have increased more than fivefold across the country in less than a decade, with red-light cameras in 530 municipalities and speeding cameras in 125, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
“There is Zeitgeist in the country right now on privacy concerns, concerns about intrusion; we understand that,” said Jonathan Adkins of the Governors Highway Safety Association, which promotes safety nationally through state-level efforts. That group and the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, an Arlington, Va.-based nonprofit organization funded by auto insurers, say studies show cameras result in a reduction of fatal crashes caused by red light-running, and in reduced speeding in pedestrian-sensitive areas such as school zones.
“What we’ve seen from the field is red light cameras and safety cameras are both important tools in the safety tool box,” Adkins said, adding that they should complement, not replace, law enforcement and should be focused on safety, not boosting budgets.
Holly Calhoun doesn’t believe they were about safety in her hardscrabble village.
“Elmwood was just doing it because they needed money,” said the manager of Elmwood Quick Mart, which offers phone cards, lottery tickets and Mexican food, and advertises its willingness to accept food stamps.
“People couldn’t afford those tickets,” Calhoun said. “They can barely afford to pay their bills. It was pretty sad.”
Settled by German farmers and laborers who came up from Appalachian Kentucky, Elmwood Place was incorporated in 1890. Like many “inner-ring” American suburbs, it hit its peak many decades ago. Older residents recall bucolic times of moonlit concerts and tire swings hanging from backyard trees.
But outsourcing of blue-collar work made life tougher for many residents, and the village’s incomes and housing values fell well below statewide averages. Housing stock deteriorated to the point where you can buy a two-bedroom fixer-upper for less than $60,000.
When William Peskin joined the police force in 1998, there were nine officers. Now the police chief is the only full-time law enforcement officer left. He said concerns grew after accidents around the elementary school; village officials looked into traffic cameras and became convinced that they were the most practical way to make the village safer.
Cameras at the village limits and in the school zone dramatically curtailed speeding once citations started going out, Peskin said. From 20,000 speeders clocked in a two-week trial period last summer, the number soon dropped to a quarter of that.
Former county prosecutor Mike Allen filed a lawsuit against the town. Among the plaintiffs: the Rev. Chau Pham, who said church attendance dropped by a third after that Sunday when so many congregants – including him – were ticketed; David Downs, owner of St. Bernard Polishing for 25 years, who said long-time customers had vowed to shop elsewhere because they had been ticketed; and a Habitat for Humanity worker who was cited four times.
“Elmwood Place is engaging in nothing more than a high-tech game of three-card monte,” Judge Robert P. Ruehlman wrote March 7 in a colorful opinion that has heartened camera foes across the country. “It is a scam that the motorists can’t win.”
The judge said the village was on pace to assess $2 million in six months (the village’s annual budget is $1.3 million). Maryland-based Optotraffic, owner and operator of the photo enforcement system in return for 40 percent of revenue, had already reaped $500,000 in about four months.
Used words such as “scheme,” `’sham,” `’stacked,” and “total disregard for due process,” Ruehlman declared the village’s photo-enforcement ordinance invalid and unenforceable.
Elmwood Place is appealing, and believes it has the law on its side.
“It’s unfortunate that the judge doesn’t see it as a safety issue,” Peskin said.
Ohio courts have upheld camera enforcement in some of the state’s biggest cities as a legitimate exercise of local government power; the Ohio Supreme Court heard arguments in 2008 on the city of Akron’s speeding cameras and approved them.
Akron began its program in 2005 after a 5-year-old child was killed. Some 3,000 citations in the first few weeks elicited public outcry, and then a lawsuit filed by attorney Warner Mendenhall after his wife Kelly was ticketed. Mendenhall said he found in his research that camera enforcement is often inconsistently carried out, the cameras aren’t always accurate, and that in many places, they are clearly used as a revenue booster.
Steve Fallis, the city’s assistant law director, said Akron uses the cameras only in school zones, and motorists have visual warnings they are in use. Any net income from the $100 citations goes into a city safety fund, not for the general budget. And there is no fee for an administrative hearing to challenge a citation. Elmwood Place charged $25
Mendenhall, whose wife’s ticket was tossed out by the city when she appealed a lack of signage at the time, isn’t convinced the legality has been settled. Maybe, he said, Elmwood Place will be the launching pad for the challenge that gets the matter to a higher authority.
“To have this patchwork quilt of laws … I really would hope that someone would take this on up to (U.S). Supreme Court,” Mendenhall said.
Recently, passions in Elmwood Place have cooled a bit. At a June council meeting, fewer than a dozen people turned out.
Taking a cigarette break out back, Mayor Stephanie Morgan talked briefly and reluctantly about the controversy, which she described as “challenging.”
She defended the cameras. “The speeding was just horrible,” Morgan said. But asked whether her constituents agree that cameras were the best solution, the 39-year-old lifelong resident repeated the question aloud and said: “You’ll have to ask them.”
Bill Wilson, 43, is running for village council in the fall election. He returned to Elmwood Place after living in southwest Florida for 20 years; there, he said, red-light cameras, speeding cameras, accident cameras and crime security cameras are commonplace.
“You get accustomed to it,” Wilson said.
In Elmwood Place, the cameras didn’t last long enough for anyone to grow accustomed to them. But apparently, they lasted longer than folks realized: On Thursday, Judge Ruehlman found that the camera company had continued to mail out citations for weeks after he ordered that it stop. He ruled Elmwood Village in contempt and said the cameras and equipment must be seized and stored until the case is resolved.
On a recent evening just before the contempt order, Holly Calhoun left her store, crossed the street and gazed up into a camera, wondering what, if anything, it was recording. Two men in a car stopped and asked what was going on. She told them she is opposed to cameras; they each gave her a thumb’s up and drove off.
Business, Calhoun said, has been slow to rebound; most people don’t seem to believe the cameras aren’t in full operation.
Elmwood Place is caught in a speed trap of its own making. On the one hand, the village faces a crippling financial blow if litigation succeeds in forcing it to pay back all the fines already collected plus legal costs; on the other, Calhoun and others think if the village wins its case and brings back the cameras, the effects on business could be catastrophic.
“I think it’s going to become a ghost town,” she said.
By: Dan Sewell
Board of Public Safety Minutes
MINUTES
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Building Commission – Ron Beane Police Department – Chief Billy Bolin
Emergency Management-Sherman Greer Fire Department – Chief Mike Connelly
~ Pledge of Allegiance ~
.
Business with representatives:
Motion by Mr. Bagbey to have board members, City Engineer, and MPO revisit the “Stop†signs and make a decision at a future meeting, 2nd by Ms. Calloway and so ordered:
1. Randy Weir, 2005 N. Thomas Avenue would like to voice his concerns reference removing the “Stop†signs from Thomas Ave and reinstall on Keck Ave. Evansville Metropolitan Planning Organization determined Thomas Ave was the major street and should be provided uninterrupted traffic flow.
Motion by Mr. Gulledge to have Clay Havill, Counsel review the application for Massage Clinic and make updates within the guidelines of the City Ordinance.
2. Mary Morris would like to address the board in reference to the Massage Clinic application.
Kay Qualls with over 30 years of experience also took exception to prostitution being addressed on the application
Joe Killabrew is getting ready to graduate from Ivy Tech with a massage certificate and felt communicable disease should be taken off application.
Motion by Mr. Bagbey, 2nd by Ms. Calloway and so ordered to approve the following signs:
3. Officer Darren Richardson requests approval to post signs reminding motorists to lock vehicles and keep valuables out of sight in the area of the Ford Center, City Parking Garages, and the back forty. The signs will be paid for with Evansville Police Department forfeiture money.
Departmental Reports:
A. Fire Department ~ Chief Mike Connelly
Motion by Ms. Calloway, 2nd by Mr. Bagbey and so ordered to approve the opening of bids:
One bid was received from Brandlee Mountain Fire Apparatus in the amount of $55,000.00 Brandlee Mountain also included a retainer check in the amount of $2,750.00.
The bid will be taken under advisement.
1. Request approval to open bids for the sale of 1Q8.
Motion by Mr. Bagbey, 2nd by Ms. Calloway and so ordered to approve the following request:
2. Request approval to seek quotes for some renovation projects EFD facilities.
B. Special Events ~ Sergeant Steve Evans
Motion by Mr. Bagbey, 2nd by Ms. Calloway and so ordered to approve the following request:
1. Greater Evansville Running and Walking Club requests approval for “Big Bang 4 Miles on the 4th†on July 4, 2013 from 7:30 am until 9:30 am. Close westbound lanes of Franklin Street from 5th to 9th Avenue. ***Barricades requested***
Sergeant Evans informed the board Sculpt EVV was approved for a permit that did not specify they were serving alcohol at their event. When alcohol is being served, security for the event increases. Without that knowledge there was not sufficient security. Sculpt EVV applied for a permit with the ending time being 11:00 pm. When police were dispatched the people involved advised they had a permit until midnight. Sergeant Evans and the board agreed when special events are before the board, a representative for the event must attend the board meeting.
C. Transportation and Services ~ Todd Robertson
1. Install 2 “No Trucks†signs on Sherman St between Virginia St & Columbia St due to large trucks using this street as a cut through which is shaking houses and hitting trees. EPD has been notified by the homeowners.
2. Install 4 “30 MPH†on Louisiana St between Main St & 1st Ave due to a continual speeding problem.
3. Install 2 “Do Not Block Road Awaiting Train Clearance†due to vehicles blocking Kratville Rd awaiting train crossing.
4. Install 4 “No Truck†signs on Mt Vernon Ave between Tekoppel Ave & Franklin St. Requested by homeowners and EPD for enforcement of designated truck routes.
5. Install a southwest bound W2-2R road intersection symbol sign due to the entrance road to Berry Plastics warehouse being hidden to traffic on Ossenberg Ln.
6. Install a W3-3 “Stop Light Ahead†sign on Lynch Rd westbound @ Burkhardt Rd.
D. Building Commission ~ Ron Beane
1. Request approval to open and award bids for the below listed properties:
a. 408 N. 3rd Ave – House
b. 226 S. Tekoppel Ave – Garage only
c. 7400 Newburgh Road – 2 sheds and remove overgrowth of vegetation around sheds
d. 1521 Culver Drive – House and garage
e. 1122-1124 W. Illinois St – House/duplex
f. 1309 S. Linwood Ave – House (Note: Fence next to 1305 S. Linwood is to remain intact)
g. 317 Jefferson Ave – House and three (3) sheds and remove the fence between 317 and 319 Jefferson Ave.
h. 1150 E. Virginia St – Fire damaged house
i. 1619 S. Garvin – House
Consent Section:
A. Massage Clinic
1. Golden Spa 2012 E. Morgan Ave-Owner Yuhua Tan-paperwork in order
B. Taxi Cab Driver’s Permit
1. Request approval for the following to receive taxi cab drivers permit:
a. Vernon Beal, Jr.
b. Gerald Myers
C. Road Closure
1. City of Evansville requests Riverside Drive between Locust and Main St be closed July 13, 2013 from 8:00 am until noon for “We Are Evansville†photo shoot. ***Barricades requested***
2. Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Department requests approval to use parts of Career and Venture Streets to conduct various training scenarios July 15th -19th and July 29th – 31st, 2013 (if needed) from 1530-1730 hours and 1930-2130 hours. This closure will not disrupt any traffic flow since school (Southern Indiana Career and Tech Center) is on summer break and there are no residences in this area. During the training deputies will be posted at each point of ingress and egress and can allow any city/county vehicles access.
D. Dumpster
1. 2126 W. Franklin Street – June 27, 2013 – remodel- no longer than 1 week.
2. 403 Enlow Ave – June 27, 2013 – remodel – no longer than 10 days.
E. Taxi Owner Application
1. Dave’s Taxi Service adding 2006 Dodge Caravan 1D4GP45R96B756029
F. Handicap Sign
1. Request approval to remove the following handicap sign:
a. 1213 Mary Street – deceased
OTHER BUSINESS:
1. Approve claims
2. Approve the minutes of Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Announcements:
Next meeting, Wednesday, July 10, 2013 at 1:00 pm
An Evening with THIRD DAY
Seats are $75 VIP, $25 and $20.
Tickets go on-sale Monday, July 15th at 10:00am.
THE CENTRE
Tri-State Business Expo – July 11
PEF/EVSC Summer Musical “Beauty and the Beast” – July 11-14
J&J Ventures Dart & Pool Tournament – Aug. 2-4
100 Men Who Cook – Aug. 24
Kentucky Reptile Show – Sept. 7 @ 10:00am
YWCA Legacy Style Show – Sept. 26
Ghost Brothers of Darkland County – Oct. 17 @ 7:30pm
An Evening with Third Day – Oct. 18 @ 7:00pm
Disney Live! Three Classic Fairy Tales – Oct. 27 @ 12:00pm & 3:00pm
CMT On Tour: Hunter Hayes Let’s Be Crazy Tour – Nov. 8 @ 7:00pm
CENTRE’D ON KIDS 2014
Junie B. Jones – Feb. 5 @ 9:00am & 12:00pm
The Monster Who Ate My Peas – March 17 @ 9:00am & 12:00pm
Are You My Mother? – Apr. 22 @ 9:00am & 12:00pm
BROADWAY AT THE CENTRE 2013-2014
Elvis Lives! – Oct. 19 @ 7:30pm
Mamma Mia! – December 13 @ 7:30pm
Straight No Chaser – December 20 @ 7:30pm
Hello Dolly! starring Sally Struthers – January 12 @ 7:00pm
Bring It On: The Musical – February 9 @ 7:00pm
Hair – March 10 @ 7:30pm
Million Dollar Quartet – March 26 @ 7:30pm
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Friday, June 28, 2013.
Larry Gray Intimidation-Class D Felony
False Informing-Class B Misdemeanor
For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at KPhernetton@vanderburghgov.org
Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are considered to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law.
IS IT TRUE July 1, 2013

IS IT TRUE July 1, 2013
IS IT TRUE yet another case of the Evansville City Council being treated as an irrelevant bunch of stooges by the Winnecke Administration Mole #28 put us onto a trail that led to an order for 96 speed humps?…these speed humps cost the City of Evansville $8,821.32 and were ordered in March of 2013?…the City took delivery of these 96 speed humps in April of 2013 a full 2 months before this City Council approved this expenditure?…the CCO realizes that this is a relative pittance when it comes to a budget of $130 Million plus but the point being made is that if the City Council needed to approve this but the order was placed and delivered before that approval was granted, why do we need a City Council?…the same utter disregard for seeking City Council approval was exhibited by former Mayor Weinzapfel when he committed the City of Evansville to the Johnson Controls deal during his last days in office without seeking Council approval for a $57 Million deal?…it seems as though these last two mayors of Evansville have not only been disrespectful of the City Council but they have been presumptive about spending as well?…the only way this sort of disregard for separation of powers will ever be stopped is if the City Council gets off of its lap dog arse and says no to presumptive spending by our monarchy of mayors?
IS IT TRUE that former Mayor Weinzapfel is back in the news with another op-ed article to scrub or obscure his record as the steward of the people of Evansville’s money?…this time it is yet another scrub the record manifesto in which our former Mayor challenges the findings of the State Board of Accounts with respect to the Ford Center construction project?…in point after point the former Mayor attempted to discredit or spin the findings?…if this former Mayor would have been watching the finances of the City of Evansville with the diligence that he is now trying to rewrite his own history we may actually have a hotel downtown, reconciled accounts, a completed McCurdy project, and be well on the way to repairing the combined overflow sewer debacle?…it would be a refreshing change to ever have a mayor that is “we†assertive instead of “I†assertive?
IS IT TRUE the demographic profile of the readers of the CCO has always been over 45 years old, educated, and in the higher tiers of earnings?…City Councilman Jonathan Weaver may have garnered a bunch of votes in the last City Council election, if the CCO polls are any indication he has little support among our demographic?…so far Mr. Weaver has lost in Mayoral polls to former Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel, Councilman John Friend, former Commissioner and losing candidate for the Democrat nomination for Mayor Troy Tornatta, and a real live dog named Blue?…the only other person to pair him against is Sheriff Eric Williams who is an unannounced but often speculated about candidate for Mayor in 2015?…our next poll will pair Weaver against Williams after which we will start doing match-ups without Mr. Weaver if he gets trounced by Williams?…as we have said before, Councilman Weaver does enjoy some serious support but after the recent polls that support is not among the experienced, the educated, or the affluent?
IS IT TRUE in San Antonio, Texas where energy is deregulated and competition is fierce the cost of a kWh or power is 8.5 cents?…that is more than across the river in Henderson, KY where the City owns the utility but roughly half of what the people of Evansville pay here is regulated Indiana where the legislated monopoly of choice does pretty much anything they can talk the IURC into?
“The joke’s on us”, by: Kyle Smith

The joke’s on us
New York City used to be a national punchline. If we elect Anthony Weiner, it will be again.
By KYLE SMITH
Anthony Weiner knew he faced a stiff challenge, that he’d be a lightning rod for jokes while getting the shaft from the press. But after blowing a load of money on campaign research, now he’s a big thing. Polling of the electorate shows a rapid rise in his fortunes, he’s still got a huge wad of cash in the bank and New York City voters are starting to say he’s a stand-up guy with an impressive package of ideas. Last week, he exploded in the polls, finishing first in one and a close second in another. Now that he’s officially a member of the political club again, you know he’s got a feeling deep in his loins that it’s time to whip out his true self and act like the cock of the walk on the third leg of his career. If there were anyplace you could smoke anymore, he’d be puffing a Winston and asking New York, “Did you feel the Earth move?â€
Sick of such puns? Just wait until Weiner wins — you won’t be able to escape them.
Weiner is starting to look like the tallest guy in Smurfopolis, what with Christine Quinn failing to build any momentum from a huge early lead and the other Democratic mayoral candidates scrambling to offer the most extravagant promises to make the schools worse, the streets more dangerous and the balance sheet insolvent.
Meanwhile, in the Republican ghetto where one in seven voters lives, former Deputy Mayor Joseph Lhota holds a lead, but he’s going to need a whole Lhota luck to stand a chance against any well-funded liberal Democrat with an approval rating higher than herpes.
Speaking of sexually transmitted diseases that just won’t go away: That leaves Anthony Weiner with a good chance of being our representative on the world stage.
Weiner would be a grandiose, overreaching mayor. Because the nation’s highest taxes are still far too low, he thinks New York City should give health insurance to 500,000 illegal immigrants — and, presumably, all the others who flow in after them when word gets around — on the pretext that this would lower costs. Taking on health care from City Hall is like trying to solve Syria or global warming.
We shouldn’t be surprised — it’s not like we weren’t warned that Weiner is a reckless and dishonest egomaniac with an absurdly inflated view of his own potency.
Between his policies, his personality and his perversions, a Mayor Weiner would return New York City to where it was before the relative sanity of the 20 years of Giuliani-Bloomberg: national laughingstock.
Image does matter in a city where tourism is one of the leading industries, a place Mayor Bloomberg dubbed (not inaccurately) a luxury good worth the high prices.
Before Rudy Giuliani stormed Godzilla-like through the city breathing fire on the various obstacles to progress, Gotham was for 30 years synonymous with pollution, disorder, crime, dysfunction and general looniness. A nightly onslaught of jokes from the likes of “Tonight Show†host Johnny Carson (who moved the show to Burbank in 1972) and lesser punditry drove home the idea that New York was a place best avoided.
(Sample Carson line: “New York is an exciting town where something is happening all the time . . . most unsolved.â€)
Weiner thinks he can put his scandal behind him, but the details are too irresistible for anyone to forget. These jokes are from last week alone:
Jimmy Fallon: “A new poll found that former Congressman Anthony Weiner only has a 15% chance of winning the race for New York City mayor. Although in his defense, he’s a grower not a shower.â€
Stephen Colbert: “Weiner would be a great New York City mayor. For one thing, we wouldn’t have to worry about a soda ban because we’ve all seen that he puts more than 16 ounces in his cup.â€
Jay Leno: “The Wall Street Journal said that Mr. Weiner didn’t respond to an e-mail seeking comment. Hey, Anthony Weiner didn’t e-mail or text you back? Consider yourself lucky!â€
You think any talk-show host will stop making these jibes one, two, even four years into a Weiner term?
No matter which Democrat wins, we’re probably doomed to a return of the cycle of buying off unions and other interest groups, holding back cops, raising taxes and driving out businesses.
But Weiner’s prominence would magnify his every failure and make it national news, a self-fulfilling prophecy that could reverse the 20-year trend of people and businesses being eager to move here.
We would become a 4-year-long dick joke.
It’s New Yorkers who are to blame, of course. As a city, we’re attracted to outsize personalities, from Ed Koch to Giuliani.
Perhaps Bloomberg protégée Christine Quinn will turn around her sagging poll numbers to cut off Weiner. But Quinn lacks the spotlight-hogging personality that seems to be a necessary attribute to impress easily bored citizens of what Mayor John Lindsay called Fun City.
We demand an entertaining mayor — so we may end up with one who is a clown.
Source: NY Post
Attorney General’s statement on U.S. Supreme Court decisions
Zoeller: States had to defend their legal authority to define marriage
INDIANAPOLIS – the United States Supreme Court issued its opinions in two cases regarding same-sex marriage: Hollingsworth v. Perry, the Proposition 8 case, and U.S. v. Windsor, the DOMA case. Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller’s Office had authored amicus briefs, filed with the Court on behalf of Indiana and many other states, in support of the authority of state governments to legally recognize the traditional marriage definition. Zoeller today issued this statement:
“While my office is duty bound to defend the authority of our state legislature and their decisions, I recognize that people have strongly held and vastly different views on the issue of marriage and ask that everyone show respect with civility to our Supreme Court and our constitutional system. Regardless of the different views people may hold, marriage should be a source of unity and not division,†Zoeller said.
On January 29, Zoeller’s office filed with the Supreme Court an amicus brief, authored by Indiana Solicitor General Thomas M. Fisher in the U.S. v. Windsor case. The brief, which urged the Court to leave intact the 1996 federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), was joined, or signed on to, by state attorneys general of 16 other states. To express their legal positions to the U.S. Supreme Court in cases where they are not plaintiffs or defendants, states such as Indiana often file amicus briefs, also called friend-of-the-court briefs.
Fisher also co-authored an amicus brief that Zoeller’s office jointly filed along with the State of Virginia in the related case, Hollingsworth v. Perry, that was joined by 17 other states. That brief also voiced support for the authority of California to adopt Proposition 8, a voter-approved referendum that had legally defined marriage in the traditional way within that state but was struck down by a federal appeals court.
The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the two cases on March 26 and 27 and issued its decisions today. The majority opinion in the Windsor case struck down the federal DOMA law as unconstitutional but confined the holding to those states where same-sex marriage already is lawful. The majority opinion in the Perry case found that supporters of Proposition 8 lacked standing to appeal the lower court’s decision that struck down the California law.
As the lawyer for state government, Zoeller’s office is reviewing the Supreme Court opinions and will advise state legislators, the AG’s law clients, as to the impact on Indiana statutes. Zoeller noted the two merits-stage amicus briefs were drafted and filed at no additional cost or expense to taxpayers and Solicitor General Fisher’s work on them was within the office’s regular budget, approved by the Legislature in advance.