BIGWIN29 legit.REGISTER NOW GET FREE 888 PESOS REWARDS! https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/author/jack-brammer/ Shining brightest where it’s dark Sat, 05 Oct 2024 16:04:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/cropped-Kentucky-Lantern-Icon-32x32.png Jack Brammer, Author at Kentucky Lantern https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/author/jack-brammer/ 32 32 Blaming ‘mob intimidation,’ Northern Kentucky Republican finds new site for fundraiser https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/10/05/blaming-mob-intimidation-northern-kentucky-republican-finds-new-site-for-fundraiser/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/10/05/blaming-mob-intimidation-northern-kentucky-republican-finds-new-site-for-fundraiser/#respond Sat, 05 Oct 2024 16:00:56 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=22751

Kyle Rittenhouse during his trial at the Kenosha County Courthouse on Nov. 5, 2021 in Kenosha, Wisconsin. (Photo by Sean Krajacic-Pool/Getty Images)

This article is republished from the Northern Kentucky Tribune, a nonprofit publication of the Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism.

Controversial gun rights advocate Kyle Rittenhouse is to be the special guest of a campaign fundraiser Oct. 9 for state House candidate TJ Roberts of Burlington.

The event will mark Rittenhouse’s second appearance in Kentucky this year. His appearance last spring at an event at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green sparked several protests on campus.

TJ Roberts

Rittenhouse, 21, gained national attention at age 17 for shooting three men in Kenosha, Wisconsin, two fatally, in August 2020 during protests following the police shooting of Jacob Blake.

Rittenhouse had left his home in Antioch, Illinois, and joined a group of armed people in Kenosha who said they wanted to protect private property.

He was cleared of multiple charges, including homicide, after claiming self-defense. Two civil lawsuits against him are pending.

The prosecution of Rittenhouse made him a celebrity among American right-wing organizations and media, gaining him meetings with former president Donald Trump and political commentator Tucker Carlson.

Roberts said he first met Rittenhouse when they both worked for the National Association for Gun Rights.

The fundraiser was initially scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Oct. 9 at the Metropolitan Club, a private business club in downtown Covington. A minimum donation of $150 to attend was urged.

The venue was changed because the club became concerned after a death threat emerged on social media aimed at Rittenhouse. The post, since removed, appeared on X, formerly Twitter, as a threat to show up at the event, scare Rittenhouse and then shoot him.

The Roberts campaign said Thursday afternoon that the venue had been changed to a barbecue restaurant in Florence because of what it called “intimidation from the far left and threats of violence.”

Roberts is not a member of the club, but a member reserved the space without disclosing the nature of the “political fundraiser.” According to a source close to the Metropolitan Club, its board was not comfortable with exposing members to even the threat of violence or a police presence for security.

In a release Roberts said, “I will always stand against the cancel culture tactics employed by the radical left” and said that despite arranging for armed security provided by the Covington Police, the venue “caved to the mob’s intimidation.”?

Roberts softened his criticism Thursday night, striking a more conciliatory tone. “I don’t blame the Metropolitan Club for what it did. Its board had to act accordingly after the death threat on social media,” he said.

Roberts said his fundraiser with Rittenhouse now will be held at Smokin’ This and That BBQ in Florence.

He said the owner of the restaurant “is a true American patriot who supports our First Amendment right to free speech and will not surrender to the pressures of those who seek to silence us. This is not just about our event — it’s a fight for the freedoms that make America great.”

Guy Cummins, owner of the barbecue restaurant, said he has held fundraisers for many organizations. “I’m a former Marine who tries to do what is right,” he said.

Cummins said he was “not very familiar” with Rittenhouse. Told a bit about him, Cummins said, “I understand that he was found not guilty. I expect everything will go just fine with this fundraiser.”

Three other Republican state legislators from the area are to be at the fundraiser: Savannah Maddox, Steven Doan and John Schickel.

Steve Rawlings, now state representative from District 66, is running for the state Senate to replace the retiring Schickel.

Peggy Nienaber of Burlington is the Democratic nominee running against Roberts in the general election ending Nov. 5.

Nienaber did not respond to an email, seeking comment about Roberts’ fundraiser.

But Jonathan Levin, the state Democratic Party’s communications director, said in an email, “TJ Roberts’ latest fundraiser with right-wing poster boy Kyle Rittenhouse is yet another reminder to voters that he’s an extremist with a disturbing view of the world that doesn’t belong in the General Assembly.?

“Whether it’s spewing antisemitism, making light of school shootings hours after the tragedy in Uvalde, or disparaging Martin Luther King, Jr., Roberts has shown all of us that he’s unfit for office.?

“Kentuckians deserve leaders who will address the real issues that matter most — like good-paying jobs and health care — instead of using their platforms to stoke fear.”

Roberts, in response, said, “There is nothing extreme or controversial about the right to self-defense. When the Democrats attempt to demonize and dehumanize Kyle Rittenhouse, they are attacking those who engage in self-defense, and making heroes out of rioters who attempt to murder law-abiding citizens.”

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Kentucky Attorney General Coleman moves to block Hazard’s restaurant tax, calls it ‘unlawful’ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/08/26/kentucky-attorney-general-coleman-moves-to-block-hazards-restaurant-tax-calls-it-unlawful/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/08/26/kentucky-attorney-general-coleman-moves-to-block-hazards-restaurant-tax-calls-it-unlawful/#respond Mon, 26 Aug 2024 18:30:19 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=21212

Hazard, the Perry County seat, on March 26, 2024. (Photo by Austin Anthony)

The Eastern Kentucky city of Hazard is facing another legal obstacle in its effort to begin collecting a restaurant tax.

Russell Coleman

Attorney General Russell Coleman is appealing a Franklin Circuit Court order that said Hazard was eligible to? pursue the tax. He called it “an unlawful tax” for the city of about 5,200.

The restaurant tax, created by the state legislature in 1980, is levied in about 50 of Kentucky’s 418 cities on retail sales of food and beverages in all restaurants in the city. The tax rate is not to exceed 3% and revenue from it is to be used to promote tourism.

Hazard sued the state, claiming it was being discriminated against by not qualifying to enact the tax. Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd last May ruled in favor of Hazard, opening the door for it and other communities to join the list of those imposing the tax. He ordered the Governor’s Office of Local Government to include on the list of cities eligible to impose the restaurant tax “all similarly situated cities” under the population of 8,000 like Hazard.??

At the request of Hazard, Shepherd amended his order on Aug. 15 to say it applies only to the city of Hazard “and has no broader application (to other cities) because this suit is not a class action suit.”??

The judge also deleted his previous requirement that the Governor’s Office of Local Government must include a list of other cities eligible to impose the restaurant tax.

Ed Jones, a Paducah attorney who is representing Hazard, said the city sought the amended order. “Ours was not a class action suit. We thought it should only apply to Hazard and the judge agreed with us. We talked to some cities about joining us earlier but they decided not.”

Other cities interested in imposing the restaurant tax now must start their own legal challenge if they want to pursue it, he said.

Morgain Patterson, director of municipal law for the Kentucky League of Cities, agreed.

She said the judge’s order last spring purported “to expand the number of cities that can assess the restaurant tax on a prospective basis, but the language of the ruling is unclear as to which cities that may include, except that it specifies the city of Hazard is eligible.”

“Now the judge has dropped from his initial order any other city besides Hazard from seeking eligibility for the tax,” she said late last week.

Hazard Mayor Donald “Happy” Mobelini

She said the judge’s initial and amended orders “preserved the right of cities that currently assess a restaurant tax to continue to do so.”

Shepherd’s amended order on Aug. 15 was good news for Hazard until Attorney General Coleman a few days later decided to appeal Shepherd’s ruling to the Kentucky Court of Appeals.

“We were ready to go with the tax but the attorney general’s appeal has stopped it for now. We hope this is only temporary and we can proceed with the tax,” said Hazard Mayor Donald “Happy” Mobelini. “I really don’t understand the reason for the appeal.”

Coleman said in a statement, “The Attorney General’s office will continue to defend the statute and oppose attempts to impose an unlawful tax.”

In his appeal filed Aug. 19, Coleman said allowing Hazard to implement a restaurant tax now is “a recipe for confusion given that this court (the Court of Appeals) might reverse the circuit court’s judgment.”

He said the appellate court should stay — or put on hold —? the circuit court’s judgment while the state’s appeal is continuing.?

Neither Gov. Andy Beshear or the state Department for Local Government were parties in the lawsuit.? Both were dismissed by an agreement to follow any court order entered in the case, said department spokesman Logan Fogle.?

Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd

?In his ruling last spring, Shepherd took issue with parts of a state law — KRS 91A.400 — that say which cities may impose the tax.

Before 2015, Kentucky’s cities were divided into six classes based on their population at the time of classification. There were more than 400 classification-related laws on the books that affected issues like public safety, alcoholic beverage control and revenue options.

After Jan. 1, 2015, that classification of cities was changed, making Louisville and Lexington 1st-class cities and others home rule class.

The amended restaurant tax law allowed the state Department of. Local Government to maintain a list of “authorized cities” that as of Jan. 1, 2014, were classified as cities of the 4th- or 5th-class.

The law said in addition to a 3% transient room tax placed on lodging, the legislative body in an authorized city could levy a tax on tourism.

Shepherd said the restaurant tax law makes an unconstitutionally arbitrary distinction of cities eligible to enact the restaurant tax based on population and classification status on an arbitrarily chosen date, Jan. 1, 2014.

The judge added that the law “fails to provide a pathway to correct the misclassification of cities like Hazard, whose population has always met the statutory criteria for belonging in the 4th class (with the authority to enact the restaurant tax) rather than the 3rd class.”

But Shepherd declined to hold all of the law unconstitutional, especially in light of the financial reliance some cities have on the tax.

He noted that many tourism projects have been funded by cities authorized to levy the restaurant tax and that many bonds are financed using proceeds generated by the tax.

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Her political future cloudy, Grimes must contend with effort to reinstate alleged ethics violations https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/08/22/her-political-future-cloudy-grimes-must-contend-with-effort-to-reinstate-alleged-ethics-violations/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/08/22/her-political-future-cloudy-grimes-must-contend-with-effort-to-reinstate-alleged-ethics-violations/#respond Thu, 22 Aug 2024 22:34:42 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=21109

In this file photo former Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes is shown at the 2016 Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Kentucky’s Executive Branch Ethics Commission is seeking to reverse a judge’s ruling that cleared former Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes of ethics violation charges.

The commission’s request to the Kentucky Court of Appeals is expected to complicate for the time being any decisions that Grimes may have about returning to politics.?

Speculation about that intensified this week with Grimes’ attendance at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. She has been mentioned as a possible candidate in 2026 for the U.S. Senate seat now held by Republican incumbent Mitch McConnell, who defeated her in 2014 to win reelection.

Grimes posted photos of herself on Facebook and ?X (formerly Twitter) at the convention with the message “Let’s Go!” to show her support for Kamala Harris as president and Tim Walz as vice president.

The convention has featured keynote speeches by former President Bill Clinton and his wife, Hillary Clinton, who lost to Republican Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential race. The Clintons are close friends to Grimes’ father, former state Democratic Party chair and caterer Jerry Lundergan of Lexington. He was convicted of election finance violations in 2020 stemming from his daughter’s campaign against McConnell and sentenced to 21 months in federal prison.

Repeated calls Wednesday and Thursday to Grimes seeking comment about the appeal and her appearance at the Democratic convention were not returned.

It was not clear who gave Grimes credentials to attend the convention but a Kentucky Democratic political operative said she was not a party delegate or alternate. Party spokesman Jonathan Levin said the party was not releasing the names of any delegate or alternate for security and privacy reasons. Andy Westberry, spokesman for the Kentucky Republican Party, said his party gave a list of names of delegates to its national convention last month in Milwaukee to reporters for planning purposes only and on an embargoed basis.

Would voters care?

Stephen Voss

Grimes, who was secretary of state from 2012 to 2020, may have success in politics again regardless of the resolution of the appeal to reinstate the ethics charges, said Stephen Voss, associate professor of political science at the University of Kentucky.

“We’ve seen voters forgive candidates for legal troubles for years. Consider Donald Trump,” said Voss.?

The political scientist said voters tend to ignore the charges against the candidates unless they are personally affected by the charges. “How personally relevant to them is the legal problem?” he asked.

“Of course, it’s more advantageous to have a clean, legal slate and you always know your opponents are going to use everything they can to get you.”

Dewey Clayton

Dewey Clayton, political science professor at the University of Louisville, said it’s “very possible” that Grimes can make a political comeback.?

“She has held public office. She comes from a political family with high name recognition,” he said.? “It’s never good to run for any public office under a cloud of suspicion and that cloud is still there to a degree for her with the appeal, which I was not aware of.”

The biggest obstacle for Grimes to run for any national office, said Clayton, is that she is a Democrat in “a very red” state.?

“But I think she can have a political future if she wants it, though there are some variables like the appeal that still need to be played out.”

Grimes’ attorney, J. Guthrie True of Frankfort, said, “We obviously would have preferred no appeal but we are confident in the circuit court ruling that was a complete vindication for her.”

Background on ethics allegations

The five-member Executive Branch Ethics Commission unanimously filed its appeal to the Court of Appeals on June 15, questioning several parts of the circuit court’s order.?

Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd

In April, Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd cleared Grimes of the commission’s charges that she improperly ordered the downloading and distribution of voter registration data from her public office while she was Kentucky’s secretary of state.?

The commission had been investigating Grimes for several years. As secretary of state, Grimes was the state’s chief elections officer. In her position, she had access to data from the state Voter Registration System in the State Board of Elections.

Shepherd, in his 33-page order, agreed with Grimes’ arguments that the commission’s charges were barred by the five-year statute of limitations and that the record did not support a finding of any violations of the state executive branch’s code of ethics.

The commission had charged that Grimes violated the ethics code by sharing voter information without requiring an Open Records request or other “established process of government.”

Grimes submitted that all the voter data at issue was information in the public domain, that she had full legal authority and discretion as secretary of state to access and share such information. She claimed no statute or regulation was violated by the sharing of such public information.?

Shepherd faulted the Ethics Commission for not conducting an evidentiary hearing in the case to hear testimony from witnesses.

Because the commission acted against Grimes without a hearing, “the evidence in the record relied upon by Grimes is not disputed,” the judge’s order said.

He also said the complaint against Grimes was filed outside the applicable statute of limitations.?

He noted that the attorney general’s office and the Ethics Commission had been investigating for more than eight years allegations of misconduct by Grimes.

“After exhaustive investigation by both the attorney general and the Ethics Commission, there was no allegation concerning any substantive violation of any statute or regulation regarding the integrity of the voting roll,” the court order said.?

“There was no allegation of tampering with the voting rolls, no allegation of improper registration or voting, no allegation of any irregularity in any vote count or tabulation, no allegation of altering any identification of any voter, no allegation of any action that could impact the outcome of any election during Secretary Grimes’ tenure as chief state election officer.”

The order added that the attorney general’s office never brought any criminal charges against Grimes and that the matter was referred to the Ethics Commission.?

Beshear says he’s focused on Kentucky; others say his time in the national spotlight isn’t over

The only allegations pursued by the Ethics Commission were that Grimes allegedly acted unethically in accessing public information in the voter registration system by downloading voter information onto a thumb drive when she was a candidate for reelection.

The commission also looked at whether Grimes improperly shared information on new voter registrations for certain House districts in response to a request made informally through the office of the state House speaker without requiring a formal open records request or charging a fee.?

The judge noted that the commission’s final order did not dispute that Grimes would have lawful access to the voter data but that the crux of its complaint against Grimes was that she “downloaded the lists for a private purpose, without paying the mandatory fees or submitting sworn forms required by law.”

The court order said the commission failed to expressly allege what “private purpose” was served by placing voter data on a flash drive.

“What that ‘private purpose’ could have been is entirely unclear to the court,” the order said. “It further remains unclear what ‘established process of government’ was violated by Grimes’ act of downloading VRS data onto a flash drive.?

“This lack of detail relating to what ‘established government process’ was violated and how using a flash drive constitutes a violation” casts doubt that the commission was proving its allegation by clear and convincing evidence, Shepherd’s order said.??

The commission had said in November 2021 that Grimes must pay $10,000 in fines for two ethical violations pertaining to handling of voter data.

Susan Clary, executive director of the Executive Branch Ethics Commission, said the panel particularly is concerned about the statute of limitations in its daily work.

She said the commission is independent and that Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear had no input on the panel’s decision to appeal the Grimes case.?

“The governor is covered by the ethics code so he must let it act independently,” she said. “No way can he be involved with its decisions.”

The Beshears and Lundergans have been involved in a decades-long political family rivalry that stems from state legislative races in the 1970s between the governor’s father, former Gov. Steve Beshear, and Jerry Lundergan. Both Steve and Andy Beshear, however, supported Grimes in her 2014 race against McConnell.?

Steve Beshear lost to McConnell in 1996. His son has been mentioned as a possible candidate in 2026 for McConnell’s U.S. Senate seat but the younger Beshear has said he wants to serve out the remainder of his term as governor, which ends in 2027. As Harris considered Beshear as a possible running mate, the governor said, “I love my job. I love serving the people of Kentucky. The only way I would consider something other than this current job is if I believed I could further help my people and to help this country.”?

McConnell, who will be 84 in 2026, has not yet said whether he will again seek reelection.

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Another Kentucky House candidate disqualified for error in filing papers https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/07/31/another-kentucky-house-candidate-disqualified-for-error-in-filing-papers/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/07/31/another-kentucky-house-candidate-disqualified-for-error-in-filing-papers/#respond Thu, 01 Aug 2024 00:06:15 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=20495

A voter prepares a ballot at the Sugar Maple Square voting location in Bowling Green, May 21, 2024. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Austin Anthony)

A judge has removed Democrat Richard Henderson as a candidate for the state House in Shelby County because of errors in his candidacy filing papers.?

Richard Henderson

The action July 30 by Shelby Circuit Judge Michelle Brummer at the request of Shelby County Judge-Executive Dan Ison leaves Republican incumbent Jennifer Decker unopposed in the Nov. 5 election for the state’s 58th House District. The district covers most of Shelby County.

Henderson, an IT employee who had no opposition in the May Democratic primary, was the first Black Democrat to seek the seat.

He said he will not appeal the judge’s order, “but we will come back in 2026.”

He said he plans to run again in two years for the House seat. “It will be a great opportunity then to flip this seat back to Democratic, especially with the success Democrats expect in keeping the White House this November.”

Rep. Jennifer Decker

Decker, of Waddy, did not respond to calls for comment about Brummer’s order.?

Ison has said Decker did not ask him to file the lawsuit, which he did with Shelby County citizen Janrose Stillwell,?

Ison said he was involved in a similar case years ago and decided that it was his duty as Shelby County’s top Republican official to challenge Henderson’s papers.

Henderson’s attorney, Fielding Ballard of Shelbyville, questioned that, saying Ison filed the lawsuit after Henderson handed out “all his campaign cards” at Shelbyville’s annual Dogwood Festival in the spring.

In their lawsuit against Henderson, Ison and Stillwell claimed Henderson violated the state law that requires a candidate’s notification petition to be signed by the candidate and “by not less than two registered voters of the same party.”

Shelby County Judge-Execuitve Dan Ison (shelbycountyky.gov)

Henderson’s candidacy papers were not signed by a single registered Democratic voter, said the legal challenge against him.

The lawsuit said Adam Muntzinger and Taunya Muntzinger were the two citizens who signed Henderson’s papers and both were registered Republicans in the district at the time They changed their party affiliation to Democrat in March of this year.

Henderson, in a response to the court, denied the allegations and said he believed the persons signing his candidacy papers were registered voters of his party “from all conversations and statements” he had with them over the years.?

Judge Brummer in her four-page order noted that recent guidance on the issue was provided by the Kentucky Court of Appeals in a similar Jefferson County case.

Ison’s attorney, state Rep. Jason Nemes of Louisville, did not return calls seeking comment.

Ballard, Henderson’s attorney, said Brummer’s ruling was expected, given the recent Kentucky Supreme Court decision involving the case in Jefferson County.

In early June, Kentucky Supreme Court Chief Justice Laurance B. VanMeter issued a one-page order that said incumbent state Rep. Nima Kulkarni of Louisville was disqualified as a candidate in this May’s Democratic election for the 40th District House seat.

The Supreme Court order in the Kulkarni case came one day after the state’s highest court held a hearing on her eligibility to run in the May primary election. She handily won the primary and had no opposition for the November general election.

Kentucky Supreme Court disqualifies Kulkarni in state House race

VanMeter’s order said a majority of the court upheld the decision by the Kentucky Court of Appeals that Kulkarni should be disqualified from the race because of errors in her candidacy filing papers.

He said the order was issued for the benefit of the parties involved and that the Supreme Court would issue an opinion “in due course.”?

It is not clear what will be done to make sure the Jefferson County district has a state representative for the next two years, beginning Jan. 1. Kulkarni was the only one on the ballot.

Kulkarni did not return phone calls about the situation.

Steve Megerle, a Covington attorney representing former state Democratic Rep. Dennis Horlander, who filed the suit against Kulkarni, said, “We are waiting for the Supreme Court to say something about what will happen.”

He said Horlander is prepared to seek legal action to make sure that Kulkarni’s name is not on the November ballot. He noted that ballots are to be prepared by mid-August.

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Kentucky Supreme Court disqualifies Kulkarni in state House race https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/06/07/kentucky-supreme-court-disqualifies-kulkarni-in-state-house-race/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/06/07/kentucky-supreme-court-disqualifies-kulkarni-in-state-house-race/#respond Fri, 07 Jun 2024 21:16:51 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=18650

Rep. Nima Kulkarni, D-Louisville, (LRC Public Information)

Kentucky Supreme Court Chief Justice Laurance B. VanMeter issued a one-page order Friday afternoon that said incumbent state Rep. Nima Kulkarni of Louisville is disqualified as a candidate in this May’s Democratic election for the 40th House district.

Meanwhile, a Shelby County Circuit judge was waiting on the Supreme Court order in the Kulkarni case to determine how to handle a similar lawsuit filed against Democrat Richard Henderson, the first Black candidate to run for the state House’s 58th District. That seat is now held by Republican Jennifer Decker, director of the Operation Care store in Shelbyville.

Shelby Circuit Judge Michelle Brummer, who held a hearing Friday morning on the Henderson case, had no immediate comment after the Supreme Court ruling on Kulkarni.

The Supreme Court order in the Kulkarni case came one day after the state’s highest court held a hearing on her eligibility to run in the May primary election. She handily won the primary election and had no opposition for the November general election.

VanMeter’s order said a majority of the court upholds the decision by the Kentucky Court of Appeals that Kulkarni should be disqualified from the race.

He said the order was issued for benefit of the parties involved and that it will issue an opinion “in due course.” The court is scheduled to release several rulings next Thursday.

It is not clear what will be done to make sure the Jefferson County district has a state representative for the next two years, beginning Jan. 1.

A possible scenario is that with no candidates both political parties in the district will have to field candidates to run in a special election.

Kulkarni’s attorney, James Craig of Louisville, said she would be interested in that.

So would Democrat Dennis Horlander, who lost to Kulkarni in the 2018 and 2020 Democratic primaries in he the 40th House District, said his attorney, Steven Megerle of Covington.

Horlander filed the lawsuit challenging Kulkarni’s eligibility. He said her candidacy papers had to be signed by two witnesses who are Democratic voters in the 40th District.

At the time of signing, one witness was a registered Republican and changed her registration after the filing deadline. Kulkarni previously testified she thought the voter was a registered Democrat and only later became aware of the issue.

Megerle said Kulkarni could not run in a special election for the seat because a new law approved by this year’s General Assembly — House Bill 580 — would make her ineligible because she is a disqualified candidate. The law says that disqualified or defeated primary candidates cannot be general election candidates unless there is a vacancy.

“I would urge her not to go down that route because it would be vigorously litigated,” said Megerle.

But Craig, Kulkarni’s attorney, said he disagrees with Megerle’s interpretation of that election law.

“She would be eligible to be a candidate if there is a special election,” he said.

Shelby County eligibility case

The candidacy eligibility case in Shelby County is similar to the Kulkarni case.

Democratic House candidate Henderson was in Shelby Circuit Court Friday morning to fight legal challenges to remove him from the ballot because of alleged problems with his candidacy paperwork.

Shelby County Judge-Executive Dan Ison, a Republican, and Democrat Janrose Stillwell, a Shelby County citizen, filed a lawsuit April 25 against Henderson, claiming the witness signatures for Henderson’s candidacy papers were not proper.

Shelby Circuit Judge Brummer, after a 25-minute hearing Friday, said she would wait on the Kentucky Supreme Court ruling on the Kulkarni case before handling the Henderson case.

Jason Nemes, the Republican House Whip from Jefferson County and attorney for Ison and Stillwell, predicted that the judge would disqualify Henderson in light of the Supreme Court order.

Henderson’s attorney, Fielding Ballard of Shelbyville, said he wanted to see and review the Supreme Court’s opinion before commenting.

Henderson, an IT employee who had no opposition in the May Democratic primary election, faces Decker, who has been in office since Jan. 1, 20221, in the Nov. 5 general election.

Ison, in a brief interview before the hearing, said Decker did not ask him to file the lawsuit. He said he was involved in a similar case years ago and decided that it was his duty as Shelby County’s top Republican official to challenge Henderson’s papers.

Ballard questioned that, saying Ison filed the lawsuit after Henderson handed out “all his campaign cards” at Shelbyville’s annual Dogwood Festival.

In their lawsuit against Henderson, Ison and Stillwell claim Henderson violated the state law that requires a candidate’s notification petition to run to be signed by the candidate and “by not less than two registered voters of the same party.”

Henderson’s candidacy papers were not signed by a single registered Democratic voter, said the legal challenge against him.

The lawsuit said Adam Muntzinger and Taunya Muntzinger, were the two citizens who signed Henderson’s papers and both are registered Republicans in the district.

The suit asks the court to find that Henderson is not a bona fide candidate for the state House and is ineligible for election to state representative. Nemes said the state Board of Election should strike his name from the November ballot. The board is to certify the ballots Aug. 4.

Henderson, in a response to the court, denied the allegations and said the candidacy papers as filed were believed to be proper and sufficient when filed as the individuals signing them were believed to be registered voters of his party “from all conversations and statements” he had with them over the years.

He asked the court to dismiss the lawsuit with prejudice and order that he be compensated for any costs and his attorney receive a reasonable fee.

Ballard, Henderson’s attorney, said the cases are similar but differ in that Henderson did not have a primary challenger while Kulkarni did, William Zeitz.

According to?unofficial results, Kulkarni took 78% of the vote in the 40th House District Democratic primary. No Republican candidates filed for the election.

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Summer raises the curtain on Kentucky’s outdoor theaters. Could this be their final act? https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/06/07/summer-raises-the-curtain-on-kentuckys-outdoor-theaters-could-this-be-their-final-act/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/06/07/summer-raises-the-curtain-on-kentuckys-outdoor-theaters-could-this-be-their-final-act/#respond Fri, 07 Jun 2024 09:00:24 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=18620

The scene at Pioneer Playhouse in Danville, which this summer celebrates its 75th season. (Photo provided)

Pioneer Playhouse in Danville will lift the curtain this weekend on its 75th season of staging plays under the stars. It is the oldest outdoor theater in Kentucky, and unlike several others, has survived many challenges.

The weather is always a challenge. So are the economy and fierce competition for entertainment dollars. The COVID-19 pandemic crippled several outdoor theaters in Kentucky but Pioneer Playhouse remained open.

Another blow to Pioneer Playhouse is the death of one of its co-founders, Charlotte Henson, in February at age 93. She shared the vision of her late husband, Col. Eben Henson, who died in 2004, to bring Broadway to the Bluegrass. Their theater attracted hundreds of young actors over the years, including John Travolta, Lee Majors, Jim Varney and Bo Hopkins.

Daughter Holly Henson primarily ran the theater after her dad died — and it flourished — but she died unexpectedly in 2013 of breast cancer.

At the reins now are the two other Henson children. Robby Henson is artistic director and Heather Henson is managing director. Their brother, Eben Henson, primarily contributes to the theater with his music.?

The theater also has been guided over the years by a board of directors and influential emeritus board members like the late Gov. Brereton Jones and Lexington businessman and philanthropist Warren Rosenthal.

Heather Henson and her father, Eben Henson, in 1978. (Photo provided)

“It’s been very hard to keep on going,” said Heather Henson.? “We have a strong network of support but we primarily appeal to an aging population.

“When we do see the younger audience, they tend to enjoy it but it’s hard to get them out.”

She said she is not sure how many out-of-state patrons visit the theater but said an informal review of license plates recently showed that about 70% of the visitors to Pioneer Playhouse are from outside of Boyle County.

When asked about the future, Henson said it is hard to say whether Eben’s and Charlotte’s grandchildren will ever operate the theater.

“My kids love the playhouse but I don’t think they are theater kids, at least not yet,” she said.? “They have seen how hard the work is.”

“When Robby and I are gone, the future of Pioneer Playhouse will be left to our board. We just hope to have a grand season this year. Much has been planned.”??

A 75th? Anniversary Gala is planned for the evening of June 15 with live music, dancing, food and bar. Alumni from previous shows are to show up.? Included in that group are Kim Darby, who starred with John Wayne in the 1969 classic western “True Grit” and Eben French Mastin, who has starred in many playhouse productions.

Attendees to the gala are urged to “think ’50s, Hollywood glam” in their dress.

“We are going to celebrate 75 years,” said Henson. “I don’t think even dad would have contemplated that.”

The glory years of outdoor theaters in Kentucky probably are in the past, she said.

“I still think they are magical places but times change and various problems arise. There are a few like us still hanging in there.”

Where the show goes on

A scene from “The Stephen Foster Story” in Bardstown. (Photo provided)

The second oldest outdoor theater in Kentucky is “The Stephen Foster Story,” a musical at the amphitheater of My Old Kentucky Home State Park in Bardstown. It started in 1959 and tells the story of the composer who wrote Kentucky’s state song, “My Old Kentucky Home.”

“It’s been challenging but I think we are doing great now,” said Johnny Warren, the musical’s executive artistic director for 12 years. He started as a cast member many years ago.

The amphitheater is in the state park but the musical is run by the Stephen Foster Drama Association, a nonprofit, Warren said. It receives no state funding and will also produce “The Little Mermaid” this summer.

“We’re 10 years behind Pioneer Playhouse in longevity but I think both of us are OK,” said Warren. “Several outdoor theaters have not survived the challenges.”

Even before the pandemic, “My Old Kentucky Home” was concerned about its future.

In 2018, its amphitheater was crumbling. State officials closed it after inspectors found major structural issues and there was no money to make repairs.

A major fund raiser brought in about $1.2 million for necessary repairs.

Warren is aware of criticisms that “My Old Kentucky Home” and other Foster songs present a romanticized, ahistorical version of the antebellum South and the institution of slavery.?

There’s no evidence that Foster ever visited Bardstown or the mansion at the state park, according to The Center for American Music at the University of Pittsburgh. The composer wrote “My Old Kentucky Home” in response to Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” while living in Pittsburgh, originally titling it “Poor Uncle Tom, Good Night,” according to the center which includes the Stephen Foster Memorial Museum.?

Art is subjective, Warren said, and the musical —? which includes 50 Foster songs and performers in hoop skirts and colorful costumes — is a fictionalized version of the composer’s story. “We are very proud to tell about people who were enslaved,” said Warren. “We are proud of how we do it. We are a play. It’s fiction and we have minorities in the play and in the audience. We try to entertain and inform.”

Shakespeare in the park

Shakespeare in Louisville’s Central Park. (Photo provided)

The Shakespeare Festival?is in its 64th season at?Central Park in Louisville. It started May 29 and runs through Aug. 11. Its productions this year are “Romeo and Juliet,” “The Comedy of Errors” and “The Tempest.” Admission is free.

“We are doing great, especially coming out of COVID,” said Matt Wallace, producing artistic director since 2013.? Attendance at Central Park has been running over 25,000 a season.

Kentucky Shakespeare, like other outdoor theaters, no longer is a funded item in the state’s two-year budget but it does receive $20,000 from the Kentucky Arts Council and $10,000 from the state Tourism, Arts and Heritage Cabinet. Wallace said Kentucky Shakespeare also raises money through various donations. Donations in the park last year totaled about $158,000, he said.

“Shakespeare is still free and that brings out the crowds.”

Wallace said tourism is doing well in Kentucky with a multitude of ways to spend dollars on entertainment.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear recently announced that 2023 marked a new record year for Kentucky tourism, with $13.6 billion generated in economic impact and 95,222 jobs.?

According to a study by Tourism Economics, 79.3 million travelers visited Kentucky last year, a 4.5 increase from 2022. They spent $1.26 billion on recreation and entertainment.

Other summer theatrical offerings

Old Fort Harrod State Park in Harrodsburg. (Kentucky State Parks)

Several other outdoor theaters plan to be busy this summer.

The Kincaid Regional Theatre in Falmouth in Pendleton County has been putting on plays since 1983. On tap this summer is “Gilligan’s Island: The Musical.”

Calls to the theater about its status were not returned.

Old Fort Harrod State Park in Harrodsburg has scheduled for the first two weekends in July the outdoor drama, “James Harrod:? The Battle for Kentucky.” It is the ninth year for the production.

For years, the park was the site of a popular drama about Daniel Boone.

No calls were returned from the Kentucky Conservatory Theatre in Lexington.

Hard times come knocking

In the 1970s, the Civil War drama based on John Fox Jr.’s book, “The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come,” was staged in Letcher County until it lost its venue.

After many years without the drama, the Cumberland Mountain Arts & Crafts Council in Jenkins decided to bring it back in 2013.

And then devastating floods in 2022 swallowed the amphitheater where the drama was held.

“We’re still recovering from that and hope to get the play going again late this summer, probably on a limited basis,” said Don Amburgey, president of the council and the play’s producer.?

In the summer of 2017, Pine Knob Outdoor Theatre in Caneyville in Grayson County put on 10 shows.

Honus Shain, who started the theatre in 1987, said it closed after two cast members in their 30s died from COVID-19 after refusing to take the vaccine. “I would say it is closed for good.”

In the summer of 1962, Jenny Wiley Theatre produced a successful drama about Kentucky pioneers.

It was a nonprofit that produced shows at both the Jenny Wiley Amphitheatre, located within the Jenny Wiley State Resort Park in Prestonsburg, and an indoor venue in Pikeville.

In 2019, the company canceled its performances and was evicted from both its locations by the municipal property owners. Its programming has been replaced by the Appalachian Center for the Arts in Pikeville.

A staffer with the Prestonsburg Tourism Commission said no shows are planned for Prestonsburg.

Twilight Theatre Productions in Aurora at Kenlake State Resort Park in Western Kentucky ended its outdoor productions a few years ago. “The woman running it got sick and that was it, gone,” said a clerk at the park.

Correction: This story has been corrected to say that Kentucky Shakespeare, while not not receiving money in the state budget, does receive funding from the Kentucky Arts Council and the state Tourism, Arts and Heritage Cabinet.

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Hazard, some other Kentucky towns may enact restaurant tax, judge rules https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/05/15/hazard-some-other-kentucky-towns-may-enact-restaurant-tax-judge-rules/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/05/15/hazard-some-other-kentucky-towns-may-enact-restaurant-tax-judge-rules/#respond Thu, 16 May 2024 00:38:15 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=17684

Hazard, the Perry County seat, on March 26, 2024. (Photo by Austin Anthony)

A Franklin Circuit judge has given a legal victory to Hazard and several other Kentucky cities interested in imposing a restaurant tax.

The tax, created by the legislature in 1980, is levied in about 50 of Kentucky’s 418 cities on retail sales of food and beverages in all restaurants in the city. The tax rate is not to exceed 3% and revenue from it is to be used to promote tourism.

Hazard sued the state, claiming it was being discriminated against by not qualifying to enact the tax. Several other cities joined in the suit.

Hazard Mayor Donald “Happy” Mobelini

Hazard Mayor Donald “Happy” Mobelini on Wednesday said he was “elated” with the judge’s order and hopes that the city commission will take up implementing a restaurant tax at Monday night’s meeting. He said amenities that appeal to tourists can improve the quality of life for residents as well.

“I don’t think there will be a ‘no’ vote,” he said. “We’re in such a disadvantaged position here. We want to take care of our kids. We want to do for our kids what other communities are doing with things like recreational areas” that the mayor said will also draw visitors.

Logan Fogle, spokesman for the state Department for Local Government, said the court ordered the department “to take all necessary and appropriate steps to implement the order, specifically by including Hazard on the list of eligible cities to impose the tax and by including all similarly situated cities, like Ashland, on the list.”

Gov. Andy Beshear was dismissed from the case earlier by agreed order and the attorney general’s office intervened to defend the state.

Kevin Grout, a spokesman for Attorney General Russell Coleman, said Wednesday the office is reviewing whether to appeal the order.

Unconstitutionally arbitrary

Meanwhile, a director of the Kentucky League of Cities warned that no city should immediately try to impose the tax based on the Franklin Circuit Court ruling because it was not final.

Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd

In a 21-page decision issued Monday, Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd took issue with parts of a state law — KRS 91A.400 — that says which cities may impose the tax.

Before 2015, Kentucky’s cities were divided into six classes based on their population at the time of classification. There were more than 400 classification-related laws on the books that affected issues like public safety, alcoholic beverage control and revenue options.

After Jan. 1, 2015, that classification of cities was changed, making Louisville and Lexington 1st-class cities and others home rule class.

The amended restaurant tax law allowed the state Department of. Local Government to maintain a list of “authorized cities” that as of Jan. 1, 2014, were classified as cities of the 4th- or 5th-class.

The law said in addition to a 3% transient room tax placed on lodging, the legislative body in an authorized city could levy a tax on tourism.

Shepherd said the restaurant tax law makes an unconstitutionally arbitrary distinction of cities eligible to enact the restaurant tax based on population and classification status on an arbitrarily chosen date, Jan. 1, 2014.

“The statute arbitrarily fails to provide a means of migration for cities whose population after January 1, 2014, either enters or exits throng of 4th and 5th class cities.”

The judge added that the law “fails to provide a pathway to correct the misclassification of cities like Hazard, whose population has always met the statutory criteria for belong tin in the 4th class (with the authority to enact the restaurant tax) rather than the 3rd class.”

But Shepherd declined to hold all of the law unconstitutional, especially in light of the financial reliance some cities have on the tax.

He noted that many tourism projects have been funded by cities authorized to levy the restaurant tax and that many bonds are financed using proceeds generated by the tax.

He said “the proper remedy” is to sever parts of the statute that violate the Kentucky Constitution’s prohibition on arbitrary legislation.

Those parts arbitrarily authorize some cities to impose a restaurant tax based on historical class and leave similarly situated cities without the ability to impose the tax.

The judge also ordered that the Governor’s Office of Local Government include on the list of eligible cities to levy the restaurant tax all similarly situated cities, like Ashland, with population ranges within the parameters of cities that had been classified 4th- or 5th-class.

Hazard and similarly situated cities with populations under 8,000 should be included on the list of cities eligible to levy the tax, the judge said.

“This ruling does not declare that those cities like Elizabethtown or Oak Grove, with current population totals over the 4th class population cap of 8,000 are no longer authorized to levy and rely on the tax,” said Shepherd.

He stressed that the Governor’s Office of Local Governments is directed to include Hazard on the list of cities eligible to impose the tax.

Shepherd said the state’s previous classification system for cities “is frozen in time based on population figures that have now changed or were initially misclassified.”

For clarity, he wrote, the now-repealed city-classification system directed that 3rd-class cities have populations between 8,000 and fewer than 20,000. Cities of the 4th class have populations of 3,000 or more, but fewer than 3,000.

Shepherd said Ashland maintains it has never had a population in this century or last that was as low 8,000, and it was misclassified.

Cities advised to proceed cautiously

Morgain Patterson, director of municipal law for the Kentucky League of Cities, said in an article on the KLC website that the cities of Bardstown, Beaver Dam, Berea, Elizabethtown, Kuttawa, Madisonville, Morehead, Pikeville and Prestonsburg intervened in the lawsuit as former 4th- and 5th-class cities eligible to assess the restaurant tax.

“These cities argued that the restaurant tax statute is constitutional and that invalidating it would cause catastrophe economic harm to those cities that impose the tax,” she said.

But, said Patterson, the judge’s order “purports to expand the number of cities that can assess there restaurant tax on a prospective basis, but the language of the ruling is unclear as to which cities that may include, except that it specifies the city of Hazard is eligible.”

She stressed that the order “is not final and should not serve as a basis for a city to adopt a new restaurant tax.”

Patterson said the order “clearly preserves the right of cities that currently assess a restaurant tax to continue to do so.”

She said the parties in the lawsuit have 10 days from the date of the order to file motions to alter, amend or vacate.

If a motion is filed, that extends the deadline for a party to appeal the decision, she said. Once the court rule on that motion, the parties have 30 days to file an appeal.

Hazard, along with Perry County Fiscal Court, filed the suit in ?January 2023. Shepherd dismissed Perry County as a plaintiff.

Judge’s order in City of Hazard v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

Restaurant Tax Order ]]>
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United Methodist delegates vote to end bans on gay clergy, same-sex marriage https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/05/02/united-methodist-delegates-vote-to-end-bans-on-gay-clergy-same-sex-marriage/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/05/02/united-methodist-delegates-vote-to-end-bans-on-gay-clergy-same-sex-marriage/#respond Thu, 02 May 2024 17:49:19 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=17122

The church formerly known as Seddon United Methodist in Maysville painted over part of its name as members decided to leave the denomination. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Jack Brammer)

After decades of intense debate that led to about half of their churches in Kentucky leaving the denomination, United Methodist delegates voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to no longer forbid gay clergy and same-sex marriage.

The vote by the delegates at the United Methodist General Conference in Charlotte, N.C., was 692-51. The conference was the church’s first legislative gathering in five years.

United Methodist Church in Kentucky?losing congregations to rift over LGBTQ inclusion

The historic vote removed the church’s 1984 ban on ordaining or appointing clergy who are “self-avowing practicing homosexuals.”

Another measure winning approval forbids district superintendents — regional administrators — from penalizing clergy for performing a same-sex wedding or declining to perform one.??

Also, superintendents can not forbid a church from hosting a same-sex wedding.

The changes on ordination will take effect immediately after General Conference concludes on Friday, while the changes on marriage policy permissions will begin Jan. 1, 2025.?

The church’s news agency reported that “delegates and observers applauded after the vote.? Many hugged and more than a few cried, in a mass release of joy for those who had pushed, some for decades to make the United Methodist Church fully inclusive.”

Bishop Leonard Fairley (Photo submitted)

In a Facebook Live video posted on the Kentucky Conference website, Kentucky Bishop Leonard Fairley said he knows “that some are disappointed, and some are rejoicing. But I pray that this is a way we can stay at the table and continue to work together and do the ministry and the mission of Jesus Christ.”

Fairley added, “The consultation of the district superintendents and the bishops and the local church have always been important and that does not change with this decision.”?

He appeared in the video with two of the five Kentucky clergy delegates – Tom Grieb, retired pastor from Goshen, and Tami Coleman, pastor of Hanson United Methodist Church near Madisonville.

The other clergy delegates from Kentucky, according to the Kentucky Conference, were Andrew Singh, pastor of Erlanger United Methodist Church; Iosmar Alvarez, senior pastor of St. John’s United Methodist Church in Louisville,? and David Grout, retired minister and formerly of Florence Methodist Church.

Lay delegates from Kentucky were listed on the website as Mark Stallions, president and chief executive officer of Owen Electric Cooperatives; John R. Denham, Mason County beef cattle farmer; Michael Watts, member of Shelbyville United Methodist; Elaine Daugherty, member of Morgantown United Methodist Church, and Linda Underwood King, retired educator who is a member of Christ Church in Louisville.

Cathy Bruce, a spokeswoman for the Kentucky Conference, said the delegates voted by secret ballot and that she did not consider it appropriate to ask them how they voted.

The LGBTQ issue certainly has been controversial.

At a special session of the United Methodist General Conference in 2019, delegates made it possible for a church to disaffiliate for reasons of conscience around issues of human sexuality and keep its property after fulfilling certain financial obligations.?

The disaffiliation process in the United Methodist Church ended Dec. 31.

The Kentucky United Methodist Conference had 749 churches in 2019, says the Lewis Center for Church in Washington, D.C., in a report issued earlier this year.

Of them, 366 – or 49 percent – left the church, the report said.?

Of the conferences nationwide? that recorded more than 30 percent church disaffiliations, the report said, Kentucky ranked fourth highest. It trailed Northwest Texas with 81 percent disaffiliations, North Alabama with 51 percent and Texas with 50 percent.? Indiana had 30 percent disaffiliations.

The Lewis Center report did not analyze the financial impact of disaffiliations on the conferences, but it said “it can be expected to vary with the percentage and size of congregations lost. Obviously, the impact is not felt equally across conferences. Some face minimal impact while others must make major realignments.”

Asked about any belt-tightening moves by the Kentucky Conference such as reducing its number of superintendents, spokeswoman Bruce said the conference now has five superintendents. She did not say how many the conference had a year ago.

“I would not say it was in a cost-cutting move. It is just how the appointments worked out this year,” she said.??

Mike Powers

She did note that the Lexington district and the Northern Kentucky district are being served by the same superintendent and that Kevin Burney, who is the conference’s director of ministerial services, will be superintendent for the Heartland district in the Louisville area beginning July 1 while retaining his current position.

Kentucky Methodists tally congregations lost to LGBTQ rift as a conservative alternative grows

The New York Times reported that the policy changes in the denomination could prompt departures of some international churches, particularly in Africa, where more conservative sexual values prevail and where same-sex activity is criminalized in some countries.

Before the disaffiliations, the United Methodist denomination was the third largest in the United States with a 5.4 million membership and presence in almost every county. It has about 4.6 million members in other countries, mainly in Africa.

Mike Powers, an elder in the Global Methodist Church who is serving as president pro tem of its MidSouth Provisional Annual Conference, is helping with efforts in Kentucky to attract disaffiliated churches to the two-year-old denomination. Global Methodist doctrine does not recognize same-sex marriages or the ordination of openly gay Methodists.

Powers said Global Methodist policy is to respond to requests initiated by any church, pastor or lay person interested in the new denomination but not to reach out to members and churches unless invited. He said Wednesday that more than 100 of the disaffiliated churches in Kentucky have been approved, applied or are inquiring about joining the Global Methodists. ?

The Global Methodist Church, based in Fredericksburg, Virginia, said in a release that it was aware of the vote at the United Methodist General Conference but that it operates independently of other denominations, has no affiliation with any of the United Methodist decisions and does not want to comment on the actions of other religious organizations.

It added that it has more than 4,500 members worldwide.

Chris Hartman, executive director of the Fairness Campaign based in Louisville that advocates for gay rights in Kentucky, said of the United Methodist vote, “It’s such a wonderful move in the right direction in the tenets of the faith.”

This story has been updated with new information.

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Judge dismisses ethics violations against former Secretary of State Grimes https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/04/29/judge-dismisses-ethics-violations-against-former-secretary-of-state-grimes/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/04/29/judge-dismisses-ethics-violations-against-former-secretary-of-state-grimes/#respond Tue, 30 Apr 2024 01:05:03 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=17059

In this file photo former Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes is shown at the 2016 Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

FRANKFORT — Former Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes was cleared Monday by Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd of charges by the state Executive Branch Ethics Commission that she improperly ordered the downloading and distribution of voter registration data from her public office while she was Kentucky’s secretary of state.

“The court order is a complete vindication of Secretary Grimes,” said her attorney, Guthrie True of Frankfort.

Attorney Jon Salomon of Louisville, who also represented Grimes, said the order shows “there was no substantial violation of any ethics law and the counts against her were arbitrary. “She was just doing her job.”

Grimes, reached Monday night, said, “After years of investigation, the Franklin Circuit Court has finally put to rest baseless allegations of ethics violations.”

She called the judge’s order “a victory for my staff, my administration and our work.”

The commission said it is reviewing the order and would decide whether to appeal. It had said in November 2021 that Grimes must pay $10,000 in fines for two ethical violations pertaining to handling of voter data.

The commission had been investigating Grimes for several years. Grimes, a Democrat and Lexington attorney, was secretary of state from 2011 to 2019 and an unsuccessful candidate for the U.S. Senate in 2014 against Republican Mitch McConnell. She is the daughter of former state Democratic Party Chair Jerry Lundergan.

As secretary of state, Grimes was the state’s chief elections officer. In her position, she had access to data from the state Voter Registration System in the State Board of Elections.

Shepherd, in his 33-page order released late Monday afternoon, agreed with Grimes’ arguments that the commission’s charges were barred by the five-year statute of limitations and that the record did not support a finding of any violations of the state executive branch’s code of ethics.

The commission had charged that Grimes violated the ethics code by sharing voter information without requiring an Open Records request or other “established process of government.”

Grimes submitted that all the voter data at issue was information in the public domain, that she had full legal authority and discretion as secretary of state to access and share such information. She claimed no statute or regulation was violated by the sharing of such public information.?

Shepherd faulted the Ethics Commission for not conducting an evidentiary hearing in the case to hear testimony from witnesses.

Because the commission acted against Grimes without a hearing, “the evidence in the record relied upon by Grimes is not disputed,” the judge’s order said.

He also said the complaint against Grimes was filed outside the applicable statute of limitations.?

He noted that the attorney general’s office and the Ethics Commission had been investigating for more than eight years allegations of misconduct by Grimes.

“After exhaustive investigation by both the attorney general and the Ethics Commission, there was no allegation concerning any substantive violation of any statute or regulation regarding the integrity of the voting roll,” the court order said.?

“There was no allegation of tampering with the voting rolls, no allegation of improper registration or voting, no allegation of any irregularity in any vote count or tabulation, no allegation of altering any identification of any voter, no allegation of any action that could impact the outcome of any election during Secretary Grimes’ tenure as chief state election officer.”

The order added that the attorney general’s office never brought any criminal charges against Grimes and that the matter was referred to the Ethics Commission.?

The only allegations pursued by the Ethics Commission were that Grimes allegedly acted unethically in accessing public information in the voter registration system by downloading voter information on to a thumb drive when she was a candidate for re-election.

The commission also looked at whether Grimes improperly shared information on new voter registrations for certain House districts in response to a request made informally through the office of the state House speaker without requiring a formal Open Records request or charging a fee.?

The judge noted that the commission’s final order did not dispute that Grimes would have lawful access to the voter data but that the crux of its complaint against Grimes was that she “downloaded the lists for a private purpose, without paying the mandatory fees or submitting sworn forms required by law.”

The court order said the commission failed to expressly allege what “private purpose” was served by placing voter data on a flash drive.

“What that ‘private purpose’ could have been is entirely unclear to the court,” the order said. “It further remains unclear what ‘established process of government’ was violated by Grimes’ act of downloading VRS data onto a flash drive.?

“This lack of detail relating to what ‘established government process’ was violated and how using a flash drive constitutes a violation of” cast doubt that the commission was proving its allegation by clear and convincing evidence, the order said.?

Court Order in Grimes Case ]]>
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$150 million plan unveiled for biomedical center in Covington, would include new home for NKU law school https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/briefs/150-million-plan-unveiled-for-biomedical-center-in-covington-would-include-new-home-for-nku-law-school/ Thu, 14 Mar 2024 19:50:23 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?post_type=briefs&p=15537

Rendering of the new Covington Central Riverfront. (Northern Kentucky Tribune)

A lofty economic development plan for Northern Kentucky was unveiled Wednesday that would create a biomedical center campus in downtown Covington with a new facility for Northern Kentucky University’s Salmon P. Chase College of Law and the University of Kentucky College of Medicine in it.

Sen. Chris McDaniel (LRC Public Information)

Republican state Sen. Chris McDaniel of Ryland Heights, chairman of the state Senate budget committee, said the Senate version of the next two-year state budget includes $150 million to establish the Commonwealth Center for Biomedical Excellence at the old IRS site in Covington.?

The site is now called Covington’s Central Riverfront development. The plan calls for it to be an innovation, entrepreneurship and life sciences campus a block south of the Ohio River.

“The Senate’s proposed budget, thanks to the work of Sen. Chris McDaniel,?aided by Senate Majority Leader Damon Thayer, is a historic opportunity to diversify Northern Kentucky’s economy beyond its core strengths in industrial,commercial, and residential real estate,” said Kenton County Judge-Executive Kris Knochelmann in a release.

Covington Mayor Joe Meyer said, “We appreciate Sen. McDaniel’s leadership and hard work in bringing the parties together to make this happen on Covington’s riverfront. The addition of Chase Law School and the UK School of Medicine will be significant additions to an exciting site.”

Covington is home to an emerging cluster of life sciences companies led by CTI Clinical Trial and Consulting Services, Gravity Diagnostics, and Bexion Pharmaceuticals. Two years ago at the request of the city, McDaniel secured $15 million to build a life sciences laboratory within the OneNKY Center, currently under construction with a planned opening in 2025.

The establishment of the Commonwealth Center for Biomedical Excellence is designed to further support the existing life sciences community and create new opportunities for innovation and economic development.

A key component of the center will be a new facility for Northern Kentucky University’s Salmon P. Chase College of Law.?

?Chase Law’s proximity to the planned SparkHaus, an entrepreneurial hub in Covington designed to foster Northern Kentucky’s next generation of business leaders, is expected to generate opportunities for its students.

“We are excited about Sen. McDaniel’s proposal to make NKU Chase College of Law a cornerstone in the Commonwealth’s Center for Biomedical Excellence in Covington, said NKU President Cady Short-Thompson.

She said it will not only benefit students’ academic and professional development but also strengthen NKU’s ability to serve the region.

The other foundational element of the new Commonwealth Center will be the University of Kentucky’s College of Medicine – Northern Kentucky campus.?“Powered by Sen. McDaniel’s stirring vision for the future, we are excited about the opportunity to join with our partners at Northern Kentucky University as cornerstones of the Commonwealth Center for Biomedical Excellence in the heart of Covington,” said University of Kentucky President Eli Capilouto.?

“We want to grow with the Northern Kentucky region as we seek to advance this state in all that we do. Through a partnership with policymakers, health providers, NKUand many others, we can educate more physicians to provide care and work collaboratively in ways that will help build an even stronger region.”

The Commonwealth Center for Biomedical Excellence is expected to have nearly 600 graduate students, faculty and staff. “We’ve been working to diversify Northern Kentucky’s economy to add strengths in innovation, entrepreneurship, and life sciences. ?As easy-to-develop land in Kenton County runs out, we must add more knowledge-driven enterprises to continue elevating the region’s prosperity,” said deputy Judge-Executive Knochelmann.

Dan Hassert, Covington’s communications director, said the proposed center “will take years to plan and build.”

He noted that the plan first must be approved by the General Assembly this year.

This story is republished from the Northern Kentucky Tribune, a nonprofit publication of the Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism.

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IVF controversy echoes memorable debate in Kentucky House 40 years ago https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/03/11/ivf-controversy-echoes-memorable-debate-in-kentucky-house-40-years-ago/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/03/11/ivf-controversy-echoes-memorable-debate-in-kentucky-house-40-years-ago/#respond Mon, 11 Mar 2024 09:50:04 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=15269

Former Kentucky House Speaker Bobby Richardson served as master of ceremonies at the Fancy Farm political speaking in 2017. In 1984, he made a speech that swung a Kentucky House vote in favor of in vitro fertilization. (KET screenshot)

Veteran Kentucky lawmakers call it one of the most dramatic moments in the history of the state’s General Assembly.? Memory of it has revived this spring as the nation — and Kentucky lawmakers — weigh a controversy over in vitro fertilization, a way to help infertile couples have a baby.

“What happened back in the state House in 1984 in that debate on in vitro fertilization in its early stages is a story worth telling again, especially now,” said Democrat Greg Stumbo of Prestonsburg.

“It certainly resonates today with all the talk on the topic.”

Stumbo was a rank-and-file legislator in that session 40 years ago before becoming majority floor leader, House speaker and attorney general.

The current debate over in vitro fertilization started last month in Alabama.

In a first-of-its-kind ruling Feb. 16, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos are children and those who destroy them can be held liable for wrongful death.

Critics immediately said the ruling could have a chilling effect on infertility treatments like in vitro fertilization.

In vitro fertilization, also called IVF, is a complex series of medical procedures that can lead to a pregnancy. It’s a treatment for couples that cannot get pregnant after at least a year of trying. It also can be used to prevent passing on genetic problems to a child.

In the process, a woman’s egg is combined with male sperm in vitro (“in glass”) in a lab to produce a fertilized egg. One or more of the fertilized eggs, called embryos, are placed in a woman’s uterus, which is where babies develop.

The embryos can be stored in liquid nitrogen at minus 320 degrees Fahrenheit indefinitely.

The history of IVF goes back more than half a century. In 1959, the first birth in a nonhuman mammal — mice — occurred from IVF.? In 1978, a woman in England gave birth after the first human IVF pregnancy.? Since then, millions of babies have been born as a result of IVF.

Is in vitro fertilization under threat in Kentucky too? Law matching Alabama’s deepens concerns

Many state legislatures — including Kentucky’s — and the U.S. Congress have seen IVF legislation sprout up since the Alabama ruling. Alabama’s legislature and governor last week enacted a law meant to shield health providers from prosecution or lawsuits, in hopes that IVF providers in Alabama would resume services. But critics said the measure? fails to address the state’s Supreme Court finding that frozen embryos are children and merit protection as human life.

The Kentucky General Assembly currently is considering three bills dealing with IVF. ?Kentucky Right to Life, the state’s most prominent anti-abortion group, supports one of them and Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, who has called IVF “a gift from God,” has thrown his support behind all three.

It will be interesting to see if the legislative debate around IVG becomes as intense as it did in 1984.

‘A magical moment’ in the Kentucky House

IVF was not that well known in Kentucky in 1984, but Rep. Stumbo, a lawyer, had a constituent who asked him to sponsor a bill that would allow public funds to be used to perform the fertility treatment.

The powerful Kentucky Right to Life opposed it. The anti-abortion group was concerned about handling of the embryos in the treatment. It backed legislation to prohibit IVF.

Bob Heleringer

Stumbo was friends with law school classmate, Rep. Bob Heleringer, a Republican attorney from Louisville who was a strong supporter of Right to Life.

Stumbo asked Heleringer for his help on his IVF bill. Heleringer added to it a provision that said the public funding was permissible “as long as such procedures do not result in the intentional destruction of a human embryo.”

“I will never forget that session of the House when we debated IVF,” Stumbo recently recalled.? “I have seen a lot of magical moments in my time in the legislature but that one was right up there.”

The debate was tense. Some members cited the sanctity of life and said embryos were very much human and alive.? Some mentioned the need for the special treatment to help couples who wanted to have children.

The time came to take the vote.? The large boards on the sides of the speaker’s chair that record the individual votes showed that IVF was in trouble.

Unbeknownst to Stumbo, House Speaker Bobby Richardson, a Democrat from Glasgow who was an attorney known for his down-home common sense, stepped down from the speaker’s chair and walked down to one of the member’s desk to deliver a floor speech on the bill

“It got so quiet in the chamber,” said Stumbo.? “A speaker never does that unless the speaker considers it extremely important.? It gets members’ attention. He thought it was extremely important and his speech turned the tide.”

“The best I remember about that speech,” said Richardson in a recent interview, “is that I was thinking about one of the worst tragedies in life is the couple who wants to have a baby and cannot.

“If in vitro is the only way they can have a family, we would be opposing them if we did not support the treatment. I still believe that.”

Richardson made his speech emotional and personal.

“My wife and I had infertility problems.? I talked about that, though we never used IVF.? What I said must have hit a nerve with some members.”

Votes started to change.? The measure eventually prevailed.

Asked if it were his words or the power he carried as speaker that influenced the final vote, Richardson said, “Who knows?? I just know it had an impact.”

In a 2008 interview with the University of Kentucky Oral History Center about his legislative career, Richardson said he was “proud” to have taken the lead on the IVF measure.

“The right-to-life people opposed in vitro fertilization. You are familiar with that,” he said in that interview. “Why, I don’t know except they might have thought there may have been additional eggs fertilized or something, but I thought the technology was a wonderful way for childless couples to end up parents, and I still do.

“That was a fight that I took a lot of pleasure in, after we were successful.”

The 1984 Richardson speech was “the most effective” Heleringer said he heard in his 22 years in the legislature.

“Other members spoke passionately about the issue that day but it was the speaker’s words that took the day. None of us knew the personal pain of infertility as he did.”

Heleringer said he had no problem helping Stumbo with his bill. “That’s when we compromised in the legislature, though Margie didn’t talk to me for a year.” He was referring to the late Margie Montgomery, the co-founder and longtime executive director of Kentucky Right to Life.

“Bobby’s speech was so spontaneous,” said Stumbo.? “It was the first time in the Kentucky legislature that Right to Life had experienced such a legislative defeat.? I remember like it was yesterday.”

The IVF debate today

Richardson said the controversial Alabama Supreme Court ruling was an offshoot of the U.S. Supreme Court decision in June 2022 to overturn the Roe v. Wade decision that established a constitutional right to an abortion.

“I think it was the wrong decision by that state court,” he said. “I don’t believe fertilized embryos used in starting IVF are human beings. They have no heartbeat.”

Cardiac tissue begins pulsing in an embryo around the fifth week of pregnancy, creating electric pulses that an ultrasound procedure can detect and turn into sound.

“I am no longer a politician but I hope IVF remains protected,” said Richardson.? “That is the right thing to do.”

Of the three bills now in the Kentucky General Assembly, ?Kentucky Right to Life supports Senate Bill 373, sponsored by Sen. Whitney Westerfield, R-Fruit Hill.? It would limit liability for doctors and other health care providers if they lose or damage a human embryo.

Addia Wuchner

Westerfield has told his colleagues that his and his wife’s son was conceived through an adopted embryo and that his wife is now pregnant with triplets from embryos that they adopted.

“We do support this bill because it protects the fertilized embryo,” said Addia Wuchner, the current director of Kentucky Right to Life. “Our goal is not to oppose proper fertility treatments but to protect the embryo.”

Wuchner said her organization could not support House Bill 757, sponsored by Rep. Daniel Grossberg, D-Louisville, which says a fertilized embryo outside of the human body is not an unborn child.

Grossberg said it would make sure women have the right to use IVF and would protect them from any prosecution.

“That bill undermines what we affirm,” said Wuchner.

She said she has no comment on SB 301, sponsored----- by Sen. Cassie Chambers Armstrong, D-Louisville.? It protects health care providers who use IVF from criminal li--------ability.

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Charlotte Henson, producer and president of Pioneer Playhouse, dies at 93 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/02/16/charlotte-henson-producer-and-president-of-pioneer-playhouse-dies-at-93/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/02/16/charlotte-henson-producer-and-president-of-pioneer-playhouse-dies-at-93/#respond Fri, 16 Feb 2024 10:50:50 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=14516

Charlotte Henson, with her son, Robby, and daughter, Heather, at the theater in Danville.

Charlotte Hutchison Henson, the matriarch of the historic Pioneer Playhouse in Danville, has died. She was 93.

Charlotte Henson, with her late husband, Col. Eben Henson, brought Broadway to the Bluegrass by establishing what is now Kentucky’s oldest outdoor theater. It has attracted hundreds of young actors over the years, including John Travolta, Lee Majors, Jim Varney and Bo Hopkins and will be celebrating its 75th season this summer.

Charlotte shared her husband’s vision of the Playhouse and continued his legacy after he died in 2004, said Mike Perros, who was mayor of Danville from 2014 to 2022 and longtime board chairman of the theater.

Charlotte Henson

Perros gave her the nickname “Iron Butterfly.”? “I called her that because she was tough as could be. She was light on her feet but could be all over the place at the theater. She was graceful but could get her message across. She was delightful yet so strong. She cared about that place.”

Charlotte Henson was producer and president of the Playhouse’s board of directors when she died Feb. 13 at her home on the grounds back of the historic theater.

Her daughter, Heather, said her mother had suffered a series of mini-strokes but had been able last summer, as she did every summer for decades, to sing for the patrons before the show. ? Her repertoire never varied, and she would start off her set with “Follow the Drinking Gourd.” The noted folk singer and archivist, John Jacob Niles, called Charlotte’s voice one of the purest he had ever heard.

Charlotte was born on Jan. 3, 1931 and raised on a farm on the Boyle-Mercer County line.

A young Charlotte Henson as an entertainer. (Photo courtesy of Pioneer Playhouse)

As a youth, she was praised for her voice. After graduating from Burgin High School, she studied music at Transylvania College (now University) in Lexington. After college, she taught music in North Carolina and later was the choir director of the First Christian Church in Danville.

Charlotte first met Eben Henson when she attended an early performance of his fledgling theater at Darnell State Memorial Hospital. He used a free auditorium at the site for his plays, where Northpoint Training Center is now located.

Later, Eben met Charlotte and her mother for lunch at a drugstore soda fountain booth in downtown Danville. He asked Charlotte for a date. Charlotte’s mother kicked Eben in the shin to signal disapproval but Charlotte already had said yes.

In the early years of their marriage, the Hensons saw big-name movie stars flock to their area of the state to star in MGM’s “Raintree County.” Charlotte was a featured extra in the film. The distinctive gingerbread ticket office at the Playhouse was taken from the set of the movie.

Charlotte worked hard with Eben to make the theater go. She also raised four children, all of whom grew up in the theater. Robby Henson today is artistic director, Heather is managing director. When Eben,

Charlotte and Eben married in 1955. (Photo courtesy of Pioneer Playhouse)

known as “the Colonel,” died in 2004, daughter Holly took over the helm of running the theater. It flourished under her leadership. But she died unexpectedly in May 2013 from breast cancer. Her husband, Tom Hansen, is the theater’s chef today. Another son, Eben David, has contributed musically and in other ways to the theater.

The theater also has been guided over the years by a board of directors and influential emeritus board members like the late Gov. Brereton Jones and Lexington businessman and philanthropist Warren Rosenthal.

Charlotte Henson was named Danville’s Arts Citizen of the Year in 2006. She donated space in the old Henson Hotel building for the Danville/Boyle County African-American Historical Space to have a home for meetings, exhibits and archives. She was a lifelong member of the First Christian Church of Danville.

Tori Kenley, office manager for Pioneer Playhouse, said she will miss “Miss Charlotte.”??

“She would come by every morning about 10:30 to say hi and ask how things were going.? She always took pride in the kitchen and was always working with the gift shop,” said Kenley. “Miss Charlotte was very much involved.”

Daughter Heather said it will be difficult to run the theater without her mom, “but as we always have said, ‘The show must go on.’? We will.”

Stith Funeral Home in Danville is handling arrangements. Visitation at the funeral home will be from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Feb. 22 and the funeral will be held at 1 p.m. Feb. 23 at the First Christian Church in Danville.

Donations may be made in Charlotte’s name to Heritage Hospice of Danville or to Pioneer Playhouse, both of which are non-profit organizations.

A full house at Pioneer Playhouse in Danville. (Courtesy Pioneer Playhouse)

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Man convicted of rape and murder loses shot at parole made possible by former Gov. Matt Bevin https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/01/30/man-convicted-of-rape-and-murder-loses-shot-at-parole-made-possible-by-former-gov-matt-bevin/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2024/01/30/man-convicted-of-rape-and-murder-loses-shot-at-parole-made-possible-by-former-gov-matt-bevin/#respond Tue, 30 Jan 2024 13:40:51 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=13906

Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman has called on Blair to resign. (Getty Images)

Gregory Wilson, who was sentenced to death after being convicted in 1988 of kidnapping, raping and killing Deborah Pooley of Covington but had his sentence reduced by former Gov. Matt Bevin to make him eligible for parole, has to spend the rest of his life in prison.

Gregory Wilson

The Kentucky Parole Board decided Monday that Wilson, now 67, must serve out the remainder of his time in prison. He will never get another chance for parole.

The board had three options to deal with Wilson: recommend he be released from prison, designate a specific number of months he must serve before being considered again for parole or decide if he must serve out the remainder of his time in prison.

“I finally feel that justice has been served,” said Joe Heil, who employed the victim at a Barleycorn’s sports bar in Newport.

Heil also said he hopes the “wrong Bevin made shortly before he lost to Gov. Andy Beshear and left office will be corrected” with a bill in this year’s Kentucky General Assembly.

Sen. Chris McDaniel, R-Ryland Heights, is proposing a constitutional amendment in Senate Bill 126 that would suspend the governor’s power to issue pardons or sentence commutations from 30 days before a gubernatorial election until the fifth Tuesday after an election, the day of the gubernatorial inauguration.?

Citing a Bevin commutation, Republican lawmaker wants to limit Kentucky governor’s pardon powers

McDaniel filed the legislation after reading that Wilson had an upcoming parole hearing.

Wilson, an inmate at the Kentucky State Reformatory, went before the full five-member parole board Monday morning. Two members of the board heard his case last week but decided that the issue should go to the full board.

Wilson initially received a death sentence but former Gov. Bevin commuted it to life with the possibility of parole before he left office in 2019.?

It was one of multiple controversial pardons and commutations Bevin issued in his last days as governor that helped sink his chances for winning any future political races.

Wilson’s case had been appealed several times but the death sentence was upheld until Bevin commuted it.

Bevin’s reduction of Wilson’s sentence angered many of Pooley’s family members and friends.

Bevin said he agreed to the commutation because he was convinced that Wilson had inadequate legal representation.

Kenton Commonwealth’s Attorney Rob Sanders strongly disagreed and worked to keep Wilson in prison.

He noted that Wilson had spent 12 years in an Ohio prison prior to the rape and murder of Pooley. He had been released from prison less than a month when he abducted Pooley.

While in custody for Pooley’s rape and murder, Wilson pleaded guilty to 13 counts of rape in Ohio.

Two sisters who are nieces of Pooley also tried to make sure Wilson remains in jail. Sanders said they have asked the media not to identify them because they fear for their safety if Wilson is released.

Also, an online petition gathered more than 6,600 signatures, asking that Wilson not be paroled.

Rob Sanders

Brenda Humphrey, Wilson’s girlfriend and co-conspirator in Pooley’s murder, was sentenced to life with the possibility of parole. She was paroled in April 2017 after serving 28 years behind bars.

Testimony in the trial revealed that Wilson raped and strangled Pooley to death while Humphrey drove them all to Indiana.

The decomposed remains of Pooley, a 36-year-old restaurant manager, were found two weeks later in a field about 20 miles west of Indianapolis. She also had been robbed.

Employer Heil said he knew Pooley for about two years. “She was very vibrant, smiled a lot. She would take on a lot of responsibilities at the bar.

“We were stressful when she went missing for two weeks.”

Heil said he still remains upset with Bevin’s reduction of prison sentences for several inmates, especially Wilson. He said he will support McDaniel’s legislation to curb the power of a governor to reduce sentences close to an election.

?Sanders, the commonwealth’s attorney, in a statement, said, “Keeping Gregory Wilson in prison for the rest of his life will keep Kentuckians safe from this serial rapist and killer. I hope Deborah Pooley’s nieces get the peace of mind they deserve knowing they took up their grandparents’ fight for justice and won.

“I appreciate the parole board righting Matt Bevin’s wrong.”

This story is republished from the Northern Kentucky Tribune, a nonprofit publication of the Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism.

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Former Kentucky Gov. Julian Carroll dies at 92 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/12/10/former-gov-julian-carroll-dies-at-92/ Sun, 10 Dec 2023 14:58:17 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?post_type=briefs&p=12494

Julian Carroll was Kentucky's governor, House speaker and a state senator. On Jan. 30, 2020, during his last term in office, he spoke on the Senate floor. (Photo by LRC Public Information)

Former Kentucky Gov. Julian Morton Carroll, who focused as the state’s 54th governor from 1974 to 1979 on providing more money to education, initiating judicial reforms and promoting the coal industry, died at 4:46 a.m Sunday at the Frankfort Regional Medical Center.? He was 92.

Carroll, a Democrat, died at the center after falling at his wooded home in Franklin County where he had been on limited hospice care for about six months.?

A friend of the family, David Cobb, said funeral information is expected to be released Monday from Harrod Brothers Funeral Home in Frankfort. The governor is expected to lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda and be eulogized by Democrats and Republicans.

In a statement, his family highlighted the political career of the former Democratic governor and lawmaker, noting Carroll “dedicated almost two-thirds of his life to being a committed public servant to this great Commonwealth of Kentucky.”

“Although we knew we were sharing our father with the people of this state for all the right reasons, there were times we missed him very much,” the Carroll family said.?

“As a family, it is with the heaviest of hearts that we grieve the loss of our beloved father, grandfather and great-grandfather. His steadfast faith and positive outlook on life, his untenable and constant love for his family, and his giving heart and warm embrace will forever be missed. Something about his gentle blue eyes and big smile will leave an everlasting imprint on our hearts. We will love and miss him always.”

Gov. Julian Carroll takes the oath of office in 1975. (University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center)

As lieutenant governor, Carroll succeeded former Gov. Wendell Ford in 1974, who left office for the U.S.Senate before his term ended. Carroll was elected as governor in 1975.?

Carroll also had other roles in Frankfort. He had five terms in the Kentucky House of Representatives, and was speaker of the House from 1968 to 1970. He was a member of the Senate from 2004 to 2020.?

?“Former Gov. Julian Carroll dedicated his career to public service,” Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear said on X, formerly Twitter. “For decades he worked to support public education and those he represented in Frankfort. Please join Britainy and me in praying for his family during this difficult time.”

Republican U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell issued a statement about Carroll’s death.

“It is with great sadness that Elaine and I learned about the passing of a pillar of Kentucky politics, Governor Julian M. Carroll,” McConnell said. “Governor Carroll produced remarkable results in his more than five decades of dedicated service to the Commonwealth and the nation. He fought to bring electricity into rural areas and to increase the quality of our public schools for his fellow Kentuckians. His impact will be long remembered, and we send the entire Carroll family our deepest condolences.”

Senate President Robert Stivers, R-Manchester, said in a release, “Gov.Julian Carroll was the longest serving governor in modern times and, arguably, the last of the influential pre-succession governors under the old Kentucky Constitution.?

“Few will have a career as distinguished as his, one that took him through the House of Representatives, the Executive Branch, and the Kentucky State Senate. Carroll influenced the Commonwealth’s governance for almost six decades.

“On behalf of the entire Kentucky State Senate, I extend my heartfelt condolences to the Carroll family during this difficult time.”

House Speaker David Osborne, R-Prospect, said, “On behalf of the Kentucky House of Representatives, I extend our deepest sympathies to the Carroll family.?

“While Kentucky lost a former governor, they grieve the loss of a father, grandfather, and great-grandfather. Gov. Carroll’s political life spanned more than six decades and included service in the Kentucky House and Senate, as well as terms as lieutenant governor and governor. May his family find comfort in that service, as well as in knowing he is once again reunited with his wife, Charlann and son, Brad.”

Charlann Harting Carroll died in 2014.? The governor and she had been married for 64 years.?

?They had four children — Kenneth, Patrice, Brad and Elly.? Kenneth takes care of the farm and Patrice lives in Lexington. Elly lives in Washington state.? Brad was killed on Aug. 14, 2011, when his Ford Explorer struck an embankment and caught fire on Leestown Road. He was 47. One of his sons, John Bradley, 30, lived with his grandfather, the former governor.

Carroll has seven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. He used to make chocolate chip cookies for them on Sundays.

Born in 1931 to Elvie “Buster” and Eva Heady Carroll in West Paducah, Carroll was one of 11 children and was amazed to have been part of such a large family. Six of the siblings became college graduates.

Carroll was a good student. Near the end of 1950 when he was 19, he began dating Charlann Harting. They parted ways the next year so she could attend the University of Kentucky and he the nearby Paducah Junior College.

After their first college year, they decided to get married.?

After graduating from the University of Kentucky Law School in 1956, Carroll served three years as an Air Force attorney and then returned to Paducah to practice law.

He garnered public attention when he successfully led a public campaign to allow the Tennessee Valley Authority to provide electricity at lower costs. The referendum passed by a 3-1 margin and Carroll became a household name in the county.

He became active in civic affairs and was a frequent lay speaker at the Cumberland Presbyterian Church.

Carroll was elected to the first of five two-year terms in the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1962 and held its highest office, speaker, from 1968 to 1970.

Julian Carroll in 1975. (University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center)

As House speaker, Carroll inherited a chamber where lobbyists frequently roamed the floor and family members came and went as they wanted. Carroll removed the lobbyists and family members from the floor to provide more decorum. Soon afterwards, the members gave him a standing ovation for the move, saying it made them more professional.

The governor was a Republican, Louie Nunn of Glasgow. He pushed through a sales tax increase that was called “Nunn’s nickel” by his political opponents and he never won another election. Carroll’s critics say he got to spend all the money when he was governor that Nunn had raised.

Carroll did not vote for the tax increase, saying he thought it was too much.

Carroll beat the popular Attorney General John Breckenridge in the 1971 Democratic primary election for lieutenant governor.? He won the office by defeating Lexington businessman Jim Host in the general election.?

Carroll was the informal running mate of former Gov. Bert T. Combs, who was seeking a second term. (The governor and lieutenant governor were elected separately at the time.) Combs, however, lost to Democrat Wendell Ford of Owensboro. Ford beat Republican Thomas Emberton in the fall’s general election. It marked the last time a Republican for governor has carried Jefferson County.

Ford later urged Carroll to run for the U.S. Senate in 1974 against Republican Marlow Cook but Carroll declined.? Ford took the plunge and Carroll became governor.

Carroll won a four-year term as governor in his own right in 1975.

As governor, he says he was most proud of increasing funding to education — doubling some teachers’ salaries — and promoting the coal industry during a national energy crisis.

He also was governor when Kentuckians approved a constitutional amendment in 1975 to reorganize the state’s judicial system.

His toughest problem to deal with, he said , was the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire.

The fire in Southgate in Campbell County occurred on the night of May 28, 1977. In it, 165 people died and more than 200 were injured. The state found numerous code violations and initiated new safety policies.

His biggest disappointment as governor, he says, was “dealing with the FBI.”?

Carroll and his predecessor were under the cloud of an investigation for an alleged workers compensation insurance kickback scheme. They were never convicted of any wrongdoing. Howard “Sonny” Hunt, a former state Democratic Party chairman, pleaded guilty to taking kickbacks from state insurance contractors and served time in prison.

Hunt and Carroll remained friends over the years.

After the governor’s office, Carroll practiced law in Frankfort.

In 2004, he was elected to the Kentucky Senate. Republicans were taking control of the state and ruled the state Senate.

In 2017 during his term in the Senate, Spectrum News reported allegations that Carroll had groped a male photographer and propositioned him for sex in 2005.? Carroll denied the allegations but the Senate Democratic caucus removed Carrroll from leadership as caucus whip and asked him to resign after hearing an audio recording that allegedly contained Carroll’s proposition to the man. He refused to resign. Carroll served in the? Senate until he retired in 2020.

Carroll was a member of Elevate Church, a local Assembly of God congregation, and liked to talk about his Christian beliefs.

This story has been updated.

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Unafraid of death, former Kentucky Gov. Julian Carroll reflects on his long political life https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/11/23/unafraid-of-death-former-kentucky-gov-julian-carroll-reflects-on-his-long-political-life/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/11/23/unafraid-of-death-former-kentucky-gov-julian-carroll-reflects-on-his-long-political-life/#respond Thu, 23 Nov 2023 10:50:43 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=12025

Julian Carroll was Kentucky's governor, House speaker and a state senator. On Jan. 30, 2020, during his last term in office, he spoke on the Senate floor. (Photo by LRC Public Information)

FRANKFORT — At age 92, former Kentucky Gov. Julian Carroll sits in a recliner at his Franklin County home, talking about his glory years in politics and the six-page program-in-progress on a nearby stand.

The program is entitled “Julian Morton Carroll: A Lifetime of Public Service.” It contains a portrait of him, his bio and a program that will include family and Democratic and Republican colleagues.

It is to be distributed when Carroll lies in state in the Capitol Rotunda.?He says he has no idea when that will be but that he is ready mentally and spiritually.

Carroll has been under limited hospice care for about six months.

Family members now attend to him. He takes oxygen. He can’t walk without assistance. His hands tremble.

But his memory of years gone by is sharp.

His red-brick home is in an isolated, heavily wooded area of Franklin County known as Deer Run Farm. It is remote but only six miles from the hustle and bustle of the state Capitol where he served as governor from December 1974 to December 1979.

The former Democratic governor has lived on the property for about 40 years and has enjoyed its calming solitude. It is filled with memories, especially of his wife, Charlann Harting Carroll.? She died in 2014. They had been married for 64 years.

On the Friday afternoon before Thanksgiving, Kentucky’s 54th governor talked for nearly two hours about the good and the bad of his life and its winding down.

As he spoke, he wore red pajama trousers and a pull-over gray shirt. He frequently adjusted the oxygen tube to his nose.

A large-screen TV was not far away on which he regularly watches the news and religious programs, especially sermons of Pentecostal televangelist Jimmy Swaggart.

Carroll in 1975. (University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center)

Surrounding his recliner were several chairs for guests who drop by to chat with him, mostly about his years in Kentucky politics. A walker is near his chair to assist him when he stands.

“I’m doing as well as I can be expected,” he says in a clear, though somewhat shaky, voice.

“I can’t walk by myself any longer. The oxygen seems to be getting more a problem. I go to the kitchen at night for dinner and occasionally go out to eat with a friend.”

He then smiles and says ever hopeful, “The way I look at it is I’ll be 93 soon (next April 16) and then 94. I have been blessed.

Before politics

Born in 1931 to Elvie “Buster” and Eva Heady Carroll in West Paducah, Carroll was one of 11 children and still amazed to have been part of such a large family. Six of the siblings became college graduates.

He was a good student. Near the end of 1950 when he was 19, he began dating Charlann Harting. They parted ways the next year so she could attend the University of Kentucky and he the nearby Paducah Junior College.

After their first college year, they decided to get married. They eventually had four children — Kenneth, Patrice, Brad and Elly.? Kenneth takes care of the farm and Patrice lives in Lexington. Elly lives in Washington state.? Brad was killed on Aug. 14, 2011, when his Ford Explorer struck an embankment and caught fire on Leestown Road. He was 47. One of his sons, John Bradley, 30, now lives with his grandfather, the former governor.

Driving home from church the Sunday morning of their son’s fatal accident, the former governor and his wife saw emergency responders at the scene. They did not know their son was involved until they received a call from the hospital.

“I could not cry,” said Carroll. “I wanted to so badly but could not. The grief was that overpowering. I was numb. You never want to lose one of your children. Never. It tears you up like nothing else.”

Family remains important to Carroll. He has seven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. He used to make chocolate chip cookies for them on Sundays.

After graduating from the University of Kentucky Law School in 1956, Carroll served three years as an Air Force attorney and then returned to Paducah to practice law.

He garnered public attention when he successfully led a public campaign to allow the Tennessee Valley Authority to provide electricity at lower costs. The referendum passed by a 3-1 margin and Carroll became a household name in the county.

He became active in civic affairs with a beautiful family and was a frequent lay speaker at the Cumberland Presbyterian Church.

He was ripe for the political world.

The state House

Carroll was elected to the first of five two-year terms in the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1962 and held its highest office, speaker, from 1968 to 1970.

As House speaker, Carroll inherited a chamber where lobbyists frequently roamed the floor and family members came and went as they wanted. Carroll removed the lobbyists and family members from the floor to provide more decorum. Soon afterwards, the members gave him a standing ovation for the move, saying it made them more professional.

The governor was a Republican, Louie Nunn.

“Louie was a country lawyer and we got along really well,” said Carroll. “Of course, we had our differences. I voted against his raising the state sales tax. It was a gutsy move on his part but it destroyed him politically.”

The sales tax increase was called “Nunn’s nickel” by his political opponents and he never won another election. Carroll’s critics say he got to spend all the money when he was governor that Nunn had raised.

“I just thought the increase was too much,” Carroll says.

The governor’s office

Carroll said he “flat out campaigned, shaking over 7,000 hands and beat” the popular Attorney General John Breckenridge in the 1971 Democratic primary election for lieutenant governor.? He won the office by defeating Lexington businessman Jim Host in the general election.

In this undated photo, Carroll is second from the left and the late Bert Combs, a former governor and Carroll’s informal running mate in 1971, sits a the far right. (University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center)

Carroll was the informal running mate of former Gov. Bert T. Combs, who was seeking a second term. (The governor and lieutenant governor were elected separately at the time.) Combs, however, lost to Democrat Wendell Ford of Owensboro. Ford beat Republican Thomas Emberton in the fall’s general election. It marked the last time a Republican for governor has carried Jefferson County.

As Ford’s lieutenant governor, Carroll said he “felt ignored. Wendell just sort of ignored me.”

But Ford later came calling on Carroll, urging him to run for the U.S. Senate in 1974 against Republican Marlow Cook.

“I kept telling Wendell no, that I wanted to stay in Kentucky,” said Carroll.? “I remember that night when some of us were meeting and I kept refusing. Wendell slammed a tablet on the table and used a well-known profanity to say he was going to run.”

Gov. Julian Carroll takes the oath of office in 1975. (University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center)

With Ford’s departure to Washington, Carroll was elevated to the governorship. He won a four-year term as governor in his own right in 1975.

As governor, he says he was most proud of increasing funding to education — doubling some teachers’ salaries — and promoting the coal industry during a national energy crisis.

He also was governor when Kentuckians approved a constitutional amendment in 1975 to reorganize the state’s judicial system.

His toughest problem to deal with, he says, was the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire.

The fire in Southgate in Campbell County occurred on the night of May 28, 1977. In it, 165 people died and more than 200 were injured. The state found numerous code violations and initiated new safety policies.

Carol on the golf course. (University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center)

His biggest disappointment as governor, he says, was “dealing with the FBI.”?

Carroll and his predecessor were under the cloud of an investigation for an alleged workers compensation insurance kickback scheme. They were never convicted of any wrongdoing. Howard “Sonny” Hunt, a former state Democratic Party chairman, pleaded guilty to taking kickbacks from state insurance contractors and served time in prison.

“I consider him as a friend,” says Carroll of Hunt. “He comes to visit me and I enjoy his company.”

The state Senate

After the governor’s office, Carroll practiced law in Frankfort.

In 2004, he was elected to the Kentucky Senate. He served there until he retired in 2020.

Republicans were taking control of the state and ruled the state Senate.

David Williams, a Burkesville attorney and former House member, had become the Senate president in 2000. He was smart and adept in keeping the Republican caucus together.

“I learned quickly that the best way for me to deal with David Williams was to stay out of his way,” says Carroll.

Williams left the Senate in 2012 to become a circuit judge. His successor as president was Clay County attorney Robert Stivers, who still holds the post.

“Robert Stivers was willing to work with me. I appreciated that very much,” says Carroll.

“When I retired, he wrote me a personal note. Robert Stivers is a real gentleman.”

Carroll does not have such feelings for Senate Majority Leader Damon Thayer of Georgetown.?“He’s overbearing, like Napoleon,” says Carroll. “He likes to run things but he has a hard time doing that.”

Carroll attributes his party’s decline in power in Kentucky to the abortion issue.

“It’s ironic that the Republican Party’s cry against abortion helped them in gaining public offices but it’s hurting them now because most people are concerned about what happens when the mother’s life is in danger or rape or incest occur.”

Carroll also gives U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell much credit for building up the Republican Party in Kentucky.

“He’s tough, very tough. I knew him as a county judge. He has totally dedicated himself to the Republican Party.” McConnell was Jefferson County judge-executive before unseating Democratic U.S. Sen. Walter “Dee” Huddleston in 1984.?

A bright light for Democrats in Kentucky, says Carroll, is Gov. Andy Beshear, who recently won reelection against Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron, who would have been Kentucky’s first Black governor.

“Andy Beshear has been a very good governor but I really don’t know if he will reach the national stage,” says Carroll. “The Republicans will be out even more so now for him to make his life miserable. I wish him well.”

Concerning the recent gubernatorial contest, Carroll said he hopes it wasn’t but wonders whether race was “a slow death knell for Cameron.”

“You didn’t hear the media talk about race much but I’m guessing it was somewhat a factor in the election,” says Carroll.

Carroll says he also guesses he will be interested in politics until his last breath.

On the farm and elsewhere

For now, Carroll is thankful for his family and “best” friends like Judy Campbell, a sister of the late Lexington businessman and attorney Terry McBrayer, and David Cobb, who was Carroll’s chief of staff in his Senate office.

“I still have people come and visit me,” he says.

He says he is most positive about his faith.

He is a member of Elevate Church, a local Assembly of God church. He likes to talk about his Christian beliefs, including that “mercy and grace for an eternal life in heaven” await those who believe.

“The Lord has been so good to me,” says Carroll.

“Every night before I go to bed, I thank the Lord for letting me have another day.”

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

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Kentucky Republicans make a clean sweep of five ‘down ticket’ offices https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/11/07/kentucky-republicans-make-a-clean-sweep-of-five-down-ticket-offices/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/11/07/kentucky-republicans-make-a-clean-sweep-of-five-down-ticket-offices/#respond Wed, 08 Nov 2023 04:54:29 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=11535

Reed Elliotte looks at the results as Republicans gathered on election night in Louisville, Nov. 7, 2023. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Matthew Mueller)

Republicans made it a clean sweep Tuesday – as they did in 2019 — by winning all five of Kentucky’s so-called “down ticket” races.

The winning Republicans were Russell Coleman, attorney general; incumbent Michael Adams, secretary of state; Allison Ball, auditor of public accounts; Mark Metcalf, treasurer, and Jonathan Shell, agriculture commissioner.

Senate President Robert Stivers, R-Manchester, said on the Kentucky Educational Television network that the GOP sweep of the five races shows that “Kentucky is still a red state.”

They are called “down-ticket” races because they are constitutional offices with less authority than the governor’s office. Each winner will serve for four years at an annual salary of $148,108.56.

Here’s a closer look at the five races.

Attorney general

Russell Coleman walks to the stage to give his acceptance speech after wining the office of attorney general on Nov 7, 2023 in Louisville. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Matthew Mueller)

Coleman, a former FBI agent who served as a federal prosecutor and was an attorney for U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell, turned back a challenge from Democratic state Rep. Pam Stevenson, a retired Air Force colonel and military lawyer. Stevenson is from Louisville, Coleman from Crestwood.

The office of the state’s top law-enforcement official has been held since 2019 by Republican Daniel Cameron, who decided to challenge Democrat Andy Beshear in the governor’s race.

Coleman, who was appointed by former President Donald Trump to be U.S. attorney for the Western District of Kentucky, told his supporters Tuesday night that he “will protect the family, will defend your rights and we will back the blue.”

He gave a special nod to the Fraternal Order of Police for its endorsement and to Stevenson for her service to the state and nation.

Secretary of state

Secretary of State Michael Adams speaks after winning reelection as Secretary of State on Nov 7, 2023, Louisville. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Matthew Mueller

Adams of Louisville, who ran as a moderate, defeated former Democratic state Rep. Charles “Buddy” Wheatley of Covington, an attorney and former fire chief of the Northern Kentucky city.

Throughout most of the campaign, Adams touted his record in bringing to the state photo ID to vote and working with Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear to make it easier to vote during the COVID-19 pandemic.

But during his victory speech Tuesday night, Adams broadened his outlook, saying that, by working, Kentuck could improve in other areas like public safety, quality of life and its long-term future.

He said he will continue to make it “easier to vote and harder to cheat.”

Auditor of public accounts

Allison Ball congratulates her campaign team after giving her acceptance speech on Nov 7, 2023 in Louisville. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Matthew Mueller)

Ball, who has been state treasurer for eight years, will move her office to that of auditor.

She turned back a bid by Kim Reeder, a tax attorney from Morehead, who was making her first race for public office.

Ball, a Prestonsburg attorney, said she will be a “watchdog” over how the state spends its money.

Treasurer

Metcalf is leaving 22 years as Garrard County attorney to become the state’s next treasurer. Ball could not seek re-election because of term limits. She ran successfully Tuesday for auditor.

Mark Metcalf

Metcalf won the treasurer’s race over Democrat Michael Bowman, who also ran unsuccessfully for the office four years ago against Ball. Bowman, of Louisville, is a former bank official and staffer for Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman.

As treasurer, an office which some have sought to abolish, Metcalf said he wants to provide Kentuckians more information about its debt.

Commissioner of agriculture

Shell, a former state House floor leader and a Garrard County farmer, ran a strongly conservative race in beating Democrat Sierra Enlow, a LaRue County native who is an economic development consultant in Louisville.

Jonathan Shell

Shell has been a supporter of U.S. Sen. McConnell and was instrumental in helping the Republican Party recruit state House candidates in the GOP’s 2016 takeover of the chamber.

He replaces Ryan Quarles, who ran unsuccessfully last spring in the Republican Party’s primary election for governor and has been named to head the Kentucky Community and Technical College Systems.

 

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Democrat Adrielle Camuel wins special legislative race in Lexington https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/briefs/democrat-adrielle-camuel-wins-special-legislative-race-in-lexington/ Wed, 08 Nov 2023 01:01:59 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?post_type=briefs&p=11483

Adrielle Camuel

Democrats kept control of a state House seat in Fayette County Tuesday in a special election needed due to the unexpected death of freshman Rep. Lamin Swann last May at the age of 45.

In Tuesday’s special election to fill the remainder of Swann’s term which runs through 2024, political newcomer Adrielle Camuel defeated Republican Kyle Whalen, who lost to Swann by eight percentage points in 2022.

In unofficial results with 285 of 286 precincts reporting, Camuel had amassed 7,775 votes to 5,729 for Whalen.

The district is considered a Democratic stronghold.

Camuel is an administrative specialist with Fayette County Public Schools. She has been involved with the Democratic party for several years.

Whalen, of Back Construction, and Camuel were selected by their respective parties this summer to run in the special election to fill Swann’s unexpired term.

Kentucky House Democratic leaders Cherlynn Stevenson and Rachel Roberts issued a statement saying: “We are proud to welcome Adrielle as our newest caucus member and know she will serve the 93rd House District and the entire commonwealth with distinction.? Her fierce commitment to public education, social justice and the needs of working Kentuckians make her an ideal fit to complete the term of our beloved colleague, Lamin Swann, whose passing in May devastated all of us.? There is no doubt that Adrielle will build on his considerable legacy and, in turn, create her own.

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Kentucky treasurer candidates agree on one thing: Don’t abolish the office https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/10/28/kentucky-treasurer-candidates-agree-on-one-thing-dont-abolish-the-office/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/10/28/kentucky-treasurer-candidates-agree-on-one-thing-dont-abolish-the-office/#respond Sat, 28 Oct 2023 16:00:59 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=11092

Republican state Rep. Steven Doan of Erlanger plans to vote along party lines in Kentucky’s race for state treasurer on Nov. 7 but his preference would be to vote to abolish the entire constitutional office.

Michael Bowman

Michael Bowman

Date of birth:? Jan. 25, 1983

City of residence:? Louisville

Occupation and previous public service:? Took sabbatical to run race about 10 months ago from being special assistant to lieutenant governor and secretary of education; former bank official and legislative assistant at Louisville’s Metro Council.

Campaign website: bowmanforkentucky.com

Quote:? “I’m running for treasurer because it’s time we had a state treasurer who doesn’t just rubber stamp bad policy, but instead focuses on accountability and transparency. I know that with the right kind of leaders, our best days are ahead of us.”

“It’s a duplication of the state Finance and Administration Cabinet, a waste of money” said Doan, an attorney in his first two-year term as a legislator.

Doan filed a bill in this year’s General Assembly to abolish the office, which has an annual $6.6 million operating budget, ------but the measure got nowhere. Similar legislation was filed before by Senate budget chairman Chris McDaniel of Ryland Heights in Kenton County. Even some candidates who have sought the office in past years have pledged to get rid of it with no success.

Doan said his desire is no reflection on anyone who has held the office or is hoping to hold it. He is not sure if he is going to try to bring back his bill in next year’s state legislative session.

“I’m gladly voting for (Republican) Mark Metcalf this fall. In fact, he was the only one in the Republican primary last spring who contacted me about my bill though he disagrees with me.”

The office and its future

Both Metcalf and his Democratic rival, Michael Bowman, say they want to keep the office and improve it. The job pays $148,108.56 a year. Current treasurer Allison Ball could not seek reelection because of term limits but she is running this fall for auditor against Democrat Kim Reeder.

Metcalf has been Garrard County attorney for 22 years. If he wins the treasurer’s race the county judge-executive would appoint a replacement to serve until an election next year.?

Bowman was unsuccessful against Republican Allison Ball in the 2019 state treasurer’s race, garnering about 40 percent of the vote. He is a former bank official and special assistant to the lieutenant governor and secretary of education.

According to the latest campaign finance reports filed with the Registry of Election Finance, Metcalf has raised about $75,000 for the race and spent about $32,000. Bowman has raised about $110,000 and spent about $79,000.

The treasurer is the state’s chief elected fiscal officer. The office’s duties include handling the state’s revenue deposits and unclaimed property fund and making records of all monies due and payable to the state. It also processes warrants from the Finance and Administration Cabinet, makes payments on behalf of the state and makes an annual report of the state treasury.?

 

Mark Metcalf

Date of birth:? Sept. 9, 1958

City of residence:? Lancaster

Occupation and previous public service:? Garrard County Attorney for 22 years.

Campaign website:? metcalffortreasurer.com

Quote: “As treasurer, I will protect tax dollars from the greedy hands of career politicians, divest state resources from woke businesses, crack down on illegals siphoning tax dollars away from lawful Kentuckians and return money to the hardworking taxpayers of Kentucky.”

The treasurer has ceremonial seats on the lottery and teachers’ retirement systems boards.

In this year’s lawmaking session, legislators made another attempt with House Bill 329 to give the treasurer more power over state contracts.

The bill, as others in the past that were struck down by courts, would allow for the treasurer, instead of the governor-appointed finance secretary, to be the final arbiter of contracts flagged by the legislature’s Government Contract Review Committee.??

Gov. Andy Beshear opposes the legislation, saying it violates the constitution because it “elevates the Treasurer over the Governor” and that the treasurer is not constitutionally bound to take care that laws are faithfully executed.? The bill currently is in the courts system.

Metcalf and Bowman claim the office has sufficient duties to be important to taxpayers. Nothing should be done to abolish it, they say.

Bowman said the office gives taxpayers more accountability over their money. “And we don’t want this office to be wrapped up in the bureaucracy of the governor or legislature.”

He noted that up until 1851, the governor appointed the treasurer with approval from the state legislature. The 1850 Constitution made the treasurer an elected office serving a two-year term. This was extended to four years in 1891 after Treasurer James William “Honest Dick” Tate absconded with nearly a quarter of a million dollars from the state treasury in 1888. He was never found.

Metcalf said he would not advocate getting rid of the treasurer’s office.?

“Overseeing the treasury should be an independent person, one elected by the people,” he said.

More accessibility and transparency

Bowman said he could provide more accessibility and transparency to the office because he would be the first state treasurer in 40 years to have financial experience.

He said Ball had done a creditable job in establishing a website to trace state dollars but even more data could be made available.

Metcalf said he has managed an office budget for all the years he has been county attorney.

As treasurer, Metcalf said he wants to show taxpayers more information about the state’s debt.?

“I believe it’s immoral to keep putting more debt on our children and grandchildren,” he said. “I would provide information to make the people more aware of this.”

Financial literacy

Both candidates said they would strive to improve Kentuckians’ financial literacy.

“I want to make sure our students learn the skills of how to be financially secure, to make sure they know how to balance a checkbook, take out a mortgage, understand investments,” said Bowman.

Metcalf said he would work closely with the state Department of Education to make sure financial literacy education is uniform throughout the state.

Taxes and other revenue for the state

The candidates split along party lines on the Republican-controlled legislature’s plan for phasing out the state income tax.

Bowman said it could result in loss of funds for the state treasury and cause the need to raise more taxes.? Metcalf said it appears to be a good proposal.

Neither candidate for state treasurer is seeking any tax increase.

Bowman and Metcalf both favored medical marijuana, saying it should generate more money for the state but Metcalf disagreed with Bowman on recreational marijuana in the state.? “I’m against it,” said Metcalf.

Pension investments

Metcalf takes a hard line against investing by state pension plans in funds that follow ESG (environmental, social and governmental) considerations in making decisions. He said he would oppose any taxpayer investments in funds that oppose the use of coal.?

Bowman believes too many Republicans paint all ESG investments “as bad, being similar to ‘woke.’

“There are good and bad. You have to review each one carefully and decide if it is a good investment for the state.”?

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

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‘Coal Miner Governor’ Paul Patton will debut memoir Saturday at Kentucky Book Festival https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/10/20/coal-miner-governor-paul-patton-will-debut-memoir-saturday-at-kentucky-book-festival/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/10/20/coal-miner-governor-paul-patton-will-debut-memoir-saturday-at-kentucky-book-festival/#respond Fri, 20 Oct 2023 14:45:20 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=10825

Then-Gov. Paul E. Patton spoke at the National Governors Association winter meeting as Nebraska Gov. Mike Johanns, left, and Idaho Governor Dirk Kempthorne listen Feb. 22, 2003 in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Stefan Zaklin/Getty Images)

When I interviewed Paul E. Patton in 1987 for the Lexington Herald-Leader during his bid to become Kentucky’s lieutenant governor, he showed me his fingernails.

They looked as if they needed a good scrubbing, I told him.

Kentucky Book Festival

When: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 21

Where: Joseph-Beth Booksellers, Lexington

What: 150 authors meeting readers and signing books, a full slate of main stage events.? educational workshops, ?craft talks, children’s events.

Sponsor: Kentucky Humanites

He laughed. He said they represented where he came from.?

The stain from operating coal mines for 20 years had left an indelible mark on his body, perhaps on his soul.

The lean, handsome man born poor in Fallsburg in Lawrence County became wealthy working in coal after obtaining a mechanical engineering degree at the University of Kentucky. He sold most of his coal interests in the late 1970s and was set financially for life.

Too young to retire in his early 40s, he entered politics and eventually became the 59th governor of Kentucky from 1995 to 2003 as a Democrat.

But he never forgot about his life in coal mines — especially his working relationships with his employees and the ever-present danger of mistakes. (Relationships and the potential for mistakes are something that also should be at the forefront of consideration for politicians.)

Throughout his adult life, Patton’s stained fingernails helped him keep in perspective his mistakes, as well as his accomplishments.

They appear to have helped produce a man who has studied himself quite well and in old age is content.

He decided to use “Coal Miner” in the title of his newly released memoir.

Patton, now 86, writes about his life in “The Coal Miner Who Became Governor,” published by the University Press of Kentucky.

It is his life story compiled from a series of about 150 interviews he gave over four years to Jeffrey S. Suchanek, an oral historian at the University of Kentucky.?

At 276 pages, it costs $70 in hardback and $35 in paperback.

The cover of Gov. Paul Patton’s memoir. (University Press of Kentucky)

Patton and Suchanek are among the authors who will be meeting readers and signing and selling books Saturday at the Kentucky Book Festival at Joseph-Beth Booksellers at Lexington Green in Lexington, starting at 10 a.m.

The governor is to participate in a forum at 2 p.m. Saturday at the festival’s main stage with other authors who have written memoirs.

He has scheduled other launch dates for the book: 6 p.m. Nov. 2 at University of Pikeville, Nov. 10 and 11 at Louisville Book Festival, Nov. 18 at Books by the Banks in Cincinnati and 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Dec. 15 at McCarthy Strategic Solutions in Frankfort.?

The Patton memoir is not the first for a Kentucky governor, says state historian Jim Klotter.?

Klotter said Gov. Bert Combs was the subject of an oral history by George Robinson and there are memoirs by former Govs. Steve Beshear, Albert B. “Happy” Chandler and Wallace Wilkinson.?

There also is a book about former Gov. Martha Layne Collins, the first and only woman to be governor of Kentucky, Klotter said.

Thoughts on the book

Probably the most anticipated question about the Patton book is what and how much does it say about the Tina Conner affair.

Patton, as governor, was accused of giving the nursing home owner preferential treatment during their extramarital affair which made national headlines.

After then-WHAS-TV reporter Mark Hebert broke the story in September 2002, Patton said he knew “whatever political future I might have had went up in smoke, and even worse, it almost cost me my marriage.”

Patton and his wife, Judi, eventually reconciled but he said their struggles were “too painful” to write about in the book.

His discussion of the Conner affair takes up about a page and a half in his book. It will be left up to future scholars to analyze this more.

Patton makes some news in the book.??

He asserts that his first indication of a strained relationship with Republican Senate President David Williams occurred when Williams complained about where he was assigned to sit during Patton’s second inaugural ceremony in 1999.

Patton also puts to rest the rumor that Republican U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell and he agreed in 1999 that McConnell would not recruit a strong Republican candidate to run against Patton if Patton agreed not to run against him in 2002.

He adds more details to his legislative victories, especially ending the University of Kentucky’s control of the state’s community colleges and creating the Kentucky Community and Technical College System.?

Paul Patton

He once said his political toughness came from presiding as county-judge executive in the rough-and-tumble world of Pike County politics.

Patton writes the book in an orderly, chronological manner, a style indicative of the engineer he is, rather than as a poet with opinions ill or praiseworthy of others.

It is at its best when he occasionally offers his personal views on other politicians with him in the arena, as he does with former Democratic House Speaker Greg Stumbo and his successor, Republican Ernie Fletcher.

The book will be extremely useful as a starting point for future scholars who might be able to shed more light on why Patton did things as he did.

Patton devotes the last part of his book as a tribute to his wife. It is the author at his most personal.

For those of us who believe in redemption, Patton regained stature after being governor with his work as chairman of the Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education and president of Pikeville College.

He now has taken to Facebook, chronicling adventures with his family and friends.

He lets us know at book’s end that he indeed is content.

Of his current life with Judi and family, he said, “What more could a man want? I feel that I have more to do, but if the Lord calls me home tomorrow, I won’t complain.”

When I interviewed Paul E. Patton in 2003 for the Lexington Herald-Leader in his final days as Kentucky governor, he said at the end he knew that his obituary would contain “up high in it, at least in the first two paragraphs,” a few of his accomplishments as governor and his adulterous affair.

I told him I expected he was right.???

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Kentucky auditor is taxpayers’ watchdog: Meet the candidates https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/10/20/kentucky-auditor-is-taxpayers-watchdog-meet-the-candidates/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/10/20/kentucky-auditor-is-taxpayers-watchdog-meet-the-candidates/#respond Fri, 20 Oct 2023 09:50:23 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=10766

Kim Reeder, left, and Allison Ball.

FRANKFORT — Three of the five stories in the old, nondescript brick office building at 209 St. Clair Street house a state office that tries to determine if taxpayers’ dollars are spent properly.

It is not the most exciting place in the world. Its scenery is dull. A lot of number crunching is always going on. But its work is vital to the operations of an efficient government.

 

Kim Reeder

Date of birth: Sept. 20, 1969

City of residence:? Morehead

Occupation and previous public service: Tax attorney, teacher, making first bid for public office.

Campaign website: www.kimforkentucky.com

Quote:? “As auditor, I would be committed to eliminating waste and abuse where it is found.”

In recent years under Republican Mike Harmon, the state auditor’s staff of about 125 has adopted his mantra to “follow the data,” and turned over some major financial failures and inadequacies in government.

They include “disorganized and unchecked” leadership in the state courts system, “unnecessary and excessive spending” in the state’s police training program, a “dysfunction” between the University of Louisville and its non-profit investment arm, warnings about the KentuckyWired project to bring the internet to all of Kentucky and every state agency’s share of the state’s massive debt for public pensions.

It also has uncovered criminal wrongdoing by several county government leaders, leading to? the 2019 conviction of former Jackson County treasurer Beth Sallee for stealing $161,000 by writing checks to herself from county accounts and the 2022 guilty plea of former Lawrence County Attorney Mike Hogan and his wife and legal secretary, Joy M. Logan, for taking part in a scheme to pay her more than $365,000 in bonuses while working in his office.

This fall, two women are vying in the Nov. 7 general election to replace Harmon as the chief watchdog of taxpayer dollars in Kentucky. Harmon could not seek another four-year term because he already has served two consecutive terms. He ran for governor in last May’s Republican primary election but lost. It’s not certain what he is going to do after the election.

Seeking to replace Harmon are Republican Allison Ball of Prestonsburg, who was elected? Kentucky’s treasurer in 2015, and Kimberley “Kim” Reeder of Morehead, a tax attorney and teacher making her first bid for public office.

Allison Ball

Date of birth:? Aug. 27, 1981

City of residence:? Prestonsburg

Occupation and previous public service:? Lawyer, state treasurer

Campaign website:? ballforkentucky.com

Quote:? “As state treasurer, I’ve delivered on my promise to serve as a watchdog of taxpayer dollars. I will maintain this same watchdog mentality as Kentucky state auditor.”?

The race thus far has been fairly quiet. Neither candidate has gone into attack mode.? There has been no vitriol. No one has been mean-spirited.

Instead, the candidates have been touting their records and their political views whenever and wherever they can. Reeder is trying to take her RV to all 120 Kentucky counties.

Their total campaign contributions to date are about the same. Reeder has amassed more than $143,000 while Ball has taken in about $136,000. The job pays $148,108.56 a year.

Each candidate claims she is ready to keep an eye on taxpayers’ dollars spent in all three branches of state government, local and county governments and public education.

Why she wants the job

Ball, who is proud that she is the first Kentucky constitutional officer to give birth in office (twice), said she started as a watchdog “on the front end” as state treasurer with money coming in and now wants to be a watchdog “on the back end” to see that state money is used correctly.

“If you want to know what I will be like as auditor, look at what I have done as treasurer,” she said.

So what has she done as treasurer?

She rattles off returning a record $172 million of unclaimed property, more than any state treasurer in Kentucky history in a single year; launching Kentucky’s transparency website showing how state government spends its money, starting a savings and investment program for Kentuckians with disabilities that allows families to save money while continuing to receive assistance at no cost to Kentuckians, and beefing up financial literacy.?

Ball also noted that she was a prosecutor in Floyd County.? “All these pieces of the puzzle fit together to show what kind of auditor I will be.”?

Reeder said her commitment to public service and passion for education and social justice led her to running for auditor.

She said her childhood poverty spurred her to earn acceptance to Yale University, where she graduated with a degree in political science.

?She then went on to earn a master’s in? public policy from Duke University and a law degree from the University of North Carolina Law School.?

After graduating, Kim earned recognition in 2011 as one of the top 10 tax attorneys in the nation by industry publication State Tax Notes. She returned to Kentucky in 2014 to take care of her dying mother.??

After her mother’s death, she stayed in Kentucky and became a full-time substitute teacher to help a teacher taking maternity leave.?

This experience led her to obtain a teaching certificate and ultimately to teach in some of the most disadvantaged classrooms in Kentucky. She said she now wants to work for all Kentuckians as state auditor.

What to tackle first as auditor

Ball said she would continue the work of Harmon in auditing disaster relief funds initiated by Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear to support victims of tornadoes and flooding in the state.

Harmon announced this year he was auditing the funds after some reports that some checks were sent to the wrong recipients. Harmon has not said when that work will be completed.

Republican auditor candidate Allison Ball waves to the crowd during the 143rd Fancy Farm Picnic on Saturday, Aug. 5, 2023. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Austin Anthony)

Even if he has an audit completed by the time he leaves office at the end of this year, the funds still will be raising and spending money after Harmon leaves, said Ball.

She has said she notified the Public Protection Cabinet, which oversees the funds, about some problems with the funds, and suggested an audit but was turned down.

Besides the relief funds, Ball said she would like to audit the Jefferson County Public Schools, especially its transportation system, and some public universities.? She noted that Harmon found financial problems at Kentucky State University and that Northern Kentucky University has had some large budget deficits.

Reeder said she would take a broad look at state education funding, especially the underfunding of transportation, before zeroing in on JCPS or other specific school districts. She also said she would carefully consider Harmon’s findings on the disaster assistance funds before deciding whether to finish a full-blown audit. “I’m a person who believes in strong reviews and then go after those that fail the reviews,” she said.

Reeder said she also wants to shine a light on public education funding gaps that penalize poor children and their schools.

Reeder said it was “a proud moment” for Kentucky in 1990 when the legislature equalized funding between poor and wealthier school districts in response to the Supreme Court’s historic decision in Rose v. Council for Better Education. But the funding gap has opened up again, she said, and is now as large as it was before the 1990 Kentucky Education Reform Act.

“We have students now whose education is not complying with the law. It is very disappointing.”

Democrats Gov. Andy Beshear and auditor nominee Kim Reeder high-five during the 26th annual Mike Miller Memorial Bean Dinner at Kentucky Dam Convention Center, Aug. 4, 2023, part of Fancy Farm festivities. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Austin Anthony)

Pension investments

Ball said she would like to keep a close eye on the possibly dangerous full integration of ESG issues into the investments of public pensions. ESG stands for environmental, scientific and governance issues.

The ESG aspects of a company’s activities are used to measure the company’s societal and sustainability policies. ESG? criteria are applied most frequently by investment firms and individuals who want to direct their money toward companies that are socially responsible.

Earlier this year, Beshear signed into law a measure that requires the state’s public pension funds to make investment decisions on financial risks and returns, rather than environmental, social, and governance (ESG) factors.

Reeder said there may be room to consider ESGs. Companies need to take a wide range of risks into account when making investments, including environmental factors, she said.

She said any government employees charged with managing funds are always doing risk management. That, she said, already includes some consideration of how investment returns could be impacted by any sort of trend, including climate trends.

Transparency and politics

Both candidates pledged transparency in their office by making better use of online information and to be sure it is non-partisan.

Each pledged to “go after” a governor or any political leader who does wrong even if they belong to her political party.

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Election disputes put heat on secretaries of state: Meet the Kentucky candidates https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/10/09/election-disputes-put-heat-on-secretaries-of-state-meet-the-kentucky-candidates/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/10/09/election-disputes-put-heat-on-secretaries-of-state-meet-the-kentucky-candidates/#respond Mon, 09 Oct 2023 09:40:57 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=10322

(Abbey Cutrer)

Pretend it’s the end of the 2024 presidential election. Either Republican Michael Adams or Democrat Charles “Buddy” Wheatley is Kentucky’s secretary of state, a job that includes overseeing elections in the Bluegrass State.

The losing candidate in the state’s presidential election calls Kentucky’s secretary of state and asks him to “find” enough votes to overturn the Kentucky results — and threatens him if he fails to do so.

Michael Adams

Date of Birth:? March 27, 1976

City of residence:? Thornhill

Occupation and previous public service:? Attorney, Kentucky secretary of state, 2020-present.

Campaign website:? michaelgadams.com

Quote: “We’ve done more in three years to make it easy to vote and hard to cheat than our predecessors were able to do in 200 years.

That’s what former President Donald Trump, a Republican, did on Jan. 2, 2021, in a phone call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in his unsuccessful bid to win another four years in the White House.

The call led to Trump’s indictment in Georgia for? interfering in the 2020 election.

“I would terminate the call,” said Adams, a Louisville attorney who is seeking another four-year term as Kentucky’s secretary of state on the Republican ticket.

“I would inform the attorney general. I would inform the FBI, basically any members of my bipartisan task force, state police and federal partners. I would make them aware and certainly notify my legal counsel. No good would come out of a call like that.”

Would he terminate the call even if the presidential candidate was his own party’s nominee?? Yes, said Adams.

It was inappropriate for Trump to have made that call to Georgia’s secretary of state, he said.

Democrat Wheatley, a lawyer and former state representative and fire chief of Covington, said he would tell the candidate — regardless of party— that Kentucky has reported its results and they are official by our state laws “and nothing will change because of that.”

Asked if Trump’s call was wrong, Wheatley said, “I think the Georgia secretary of state did the right thing.” Raffensperger opened up an investigation of the call and informed authorities about it.

Charles “Buddy” Wheatley

Date of birth: Feb. 28, 1961

City of residence: Covington

Occupation and previous public service: Former Covington fire chief; state representative, 2019-2003.

Campaign website: buddyforkentucky.com

Quote: “I will be a secretary of state that fiercely protects and promotes Kentuckians’ fundamental rights of free and fair elections.”

Across the nation, the public office of secretary of state has taken on more consequence and visibility with recent election disputes.

Adams and Wheatley each say they are the best person to handle that job in Kentucky in their hopes of winning the Nov. 7 general election.

The secretary of state is Kentucky’s chief election officer, chief business official as keeper of start-up papers and other corporate records, and chief advocate for civic engagement. The job pays $148,108.56 a year.? It is a constitutional office and is often referred to as being on the “down ticket,” meaning it is below the power of the governor’s office.

For the race so far, Wheatley has raised more campaign funds —$165,692 — but Adams leads with receipts — $225,345. That is because Adams took out a $156,000 loan for his campaign, according to the latest records from the Kentucky Registry of Election Finance.

Here’s a look at some of the major issues in the race and the candidates’ views on them.

Making it easier to vote

On his campaign website, Wheatley says, “Kentucky is still one of the most restrictive voting access states in the Union. In 2022, we actually made it harder to vote. I will bring back more polling locations and precincts to make it easier to vote.”

Asked why he’s saying that, Wheatley said, “For several reasons, including we have only three early voting days, our polls close at the earliest time in the country at 6 p.m., felons can’t vote except for executive order, and we don’t allow independents to vote in the primaries.”

Wheatley is calling for “more poll locations, more poll workers and more access to the polls so our elections truly reflect the voters of Kentucky.”

He said in recent years that Adams has presided over a drastic reduction of polling places replaced by super center voting locations. “It’s really discouraging.”

Adams strongly disagrees with Wheatley’s assessment of voting in Kentucky.

“Kentucky makes it easier to vote than a lot of blue states on the East Coast. If it is restrictive in any way, it’s because Mr. Wheatley’s political party ran this Capitol and office for 100 years. It wasn’t until I won that we increased voter access. They did nothing.

“All his party ever brought to this office is corruption,” said Adams, referring to his predecessor, Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes, who was fined $10,000 by the Executive Branch Ethics Commission for what the panel determined was improper use of voter data that benefited her and others. Grimes, secretary of state from 2012 to 2020, has denied any wrongdoing and said she would appeal the commission’s fine.

Adams said Kentucky is the only red and southern state to make it easier to vote in the last three years.

Debates: The candidates are scheduled to participate in two joint appearances — Oct. 9 on the Kentucky Educational Television network and Oct. 19 with the League of Women Voters of Kentucky.

The KET face-off starts at 8 p.m. in Lexington. The League debate in Louisville will begin at 1 p.m. and is co-sponsored by WLKY-TV.

He said that came about because Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear and he worked together during the COVID-19 pandemic to make voting easier. Their changes included early voting and more use of absentee ballots. The legislature later made those changes permanent though not as generous as they had been for the 2020 election during the first year of the pandemic.?

“That’s why I have broad support from both parties,” he said, noting that he took flak from some in his own party. One dubbed him “Benedict Adams.”

“My campaign welcomes support from all Kentuckians. I do not take the race for granted, nor should anyone who wants fair, free, accessible and secure elections.”

Adams ?said he would like to see more voting but several obstacles have to be overcome.

Adams noted that it’s becoming more difficult to find workers at the precinct polls and locations to conduct voting.

Adams said some churches have stopped being voting locations, especially since there was a constitutional amendment dealing with abortion on the ballot last year in conflict with their teachings.?

Some schools chose to no longer be voting locations after COVID-19, he said.

Adams also said he would like to see more early voting but that would require more personnel, especially in county clerks’ offices.

And the need has not been shown to have more voting days in primary or non-presidential general elections, he added.

About 45 percent of the vote cast in the 2020 presidential election came in early voting, said Adams, but last year only 15 percent of the voters voted early in the primary.

“There is no design on my part to suppress voters, just the opposite,” said Adams. “I am the father of early voting. My opponent likes to say I’m a voter suppressor.? That is ridiculous.? He lacks credibility. I have risked my neck to get people to vote.”

Secretary of State Michael Adams addresses reporters in the Kentucky Capitol. (Kentucky Lantern photo by McKenna Horsley)

Adams’ freelance work

The Lexington Herald-Leader reported in January that Adams sometimes does outside legal work for Republican clients.

Wheatley said Adams’ freelance work is “a conflict of interest, sometimes with some seedy people.”

But Adams said the extra work only amounts to a few hours each week and does not interfere with his job as secretary of state.

“It takes zero hours from my state job,” said Adams.? “By the way, Wheatley also practiced law when he was a state representative.”

Allowing more felons to vote

One of Gov. Andy Beshear’s first acts as governor in December 2019 was to restore the right to vote for at least 140,000 former felons who had fully completed their felony sentences for nonviolent or nonsexual crimes. The number of people who have had their voting rights restored due to the order has now grown to 190,726, according to his administration.

Both Wheatley and Adams said they would encourage whoever is the next governor to continue that policy, maybe even pushing a constitutional amendment for it.

Both candidates also say they support giving independents the right to choose to vote in primary elections.

Democratic secretary of state candidate Buddy Wheatley speaks during the Democrats’ Bean Dinner on Friday, Aug. 4, 2023, the eve of the Fancy Farm political picnic. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Austin Anthony)

Wheatley’s job suspension as fire chief

At this year’s Fancy Farm picnic, Adams brought up Wheatley’s 2008 two-week suspension as Covington fire chief for violating city policy by consuming alcoholic beverages prior to operating a city-issued vehicle and wrecking it.

The Covington city manager said Wheatley in February 2008 was suspended without pay for two weeks after he crashed a city-issued 2000 Ford Crown Victoria in Hebron, totaling it head-on.

Wheatley had to make restitution to the city for the vehicle and lost a merit-based pay raise.

Wheatley said during a recent interview that he was never charged with any wrongdoing, but “simply made a mistake.” He said he has never been charged with any violation of the law in his life.

Wheatley also said if a similar incident had happened to Adams 15 years ago he would have not brought it up in this year’s race.

Adams said he did not believe that. He said the issue reflects on d Wheatley’s judgment while on the job.?

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

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Ball claims she asked Beshear administration for audit of disaster donations, was rejected https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/10/02/ball-claims-she-asked-beshear-administration-for-audit-of-disaster-donations-was-rejected/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/10/02/ball-claims-she-asked-beshear-administration-for-audit-of-disaster-donations-was-rejected/#respond Tue, 03 Oct 2023 03:19:57 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=10200

Kentucky Capitol. (Getty Images)

State Treasurer Allison Ball claimed Monday night that Gov. Andy Beshear’s administration turned down her request for an audit of millions of dollars in disaster relief funds it had generated from donations.

Republican Auditor candidate Allison Ball waves to the crowd during the 143rd Fancy Farm Picnic, Aug. 5, 2023. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Austin Anthony)

Ball said the state Public Protection Cabinet, which oversees the funds, said “no thank you” to her request.

Ball’s comments came during an appearance on Kentucky Educational Television’s “Kentucky Tonight” show with host Renee Shaw for this fall’s candidates for state auditor.

Ball, a Republican who could not run again for treasurer because of term limits, is being challenged by Democrat Kim Reeder.? The current auditor, Mike Harmon, also could not run again for that office and he was an unsuccessful candidate in last May’s Republican primary election for governor.

Also on the KET show were candidates for state treasurer — Democrat Michael Bowman and Republican Mark Metcalf, who argued over the state legislature’s decision to try to phase out the state income tax.? Metcalf said he supported the move while Bowman voiced opposition.

The auditor candidates took the first half-hour of the hour-long show.

In it, Ball, a former prosecutor, made her claim about the Beshear administration’s rebuff of her request for an audit of disaster relief funds.

The Beshear administration said late Monday night it had no immediate comment on Ball’s claim.

Kimberley “Kim” Reeder

As of July, the Team Eastern Kentucky fund had raised?more than $13 million?since heavy flooding in July 2022, and the Team Western Kentucky fund had brought in more than $52 million since the December 2021 tornadoes.

In July, Auditor Harmon announced that his office is launching a special examination of the two funds.

Harmon said his exam would focus on the Public Protection Cabinet’s acceptance, administration and expenditure of money associated with the relief funds, and would cover the timeframe of Dec. 11, 2021, through June 30, 2023.

Harmon said his decision to audit the funds followed a letter of request for an audit sent to his office by Rep. Adam Bowling and Sen. Brandon Storm, the co-chairs of the Legislative Oversight and Investigations Committee.

Harmon has not said when his audit of the funds will be completed. ?Beshear has said the announcement of the audit a few months before the Nov. 7 election smacks of politics.

Ball, a Floyd County native and attorney, said Monday night there are reports that more than 200 checks went to the wrong people and about 1,000 checks have not been cashed at all.

“We need to make sure there is a good audit of these funds,” said Ball.

Mark Metcalf

Reeder, a native of Rowan County and a tax lawyer, said she would look at the details of the relief funds as auditor and then decide whether to audit them

Both candidates said they would be watchdogs of state spending and would not hesitate to conduct audits even if they were embarrassing to leaders of their political parties.

In the discussion with the treasurer candidates, Metcalf, a career prosecutor in Garrard County, and Bowman, a Louisville bank officer and former legislative assistant to Louisville’s Metro Government, took opposite sides on the state’s income tax reduction plan.

Last February, Beshear signed House Bill 1 to provide a 0.5 percent individual income tax reduction effective Jan. 1, 2024. The rate had been cut 0.5 percent? to 4.5 percent the previous year, over Beshear’s veto, with more cuts possible if the state’s financial picture met certain benchmarks.

Michael Bowman

But it was recently reported that the state failed to meet the Republican legislature’s fiscal requirements to usher in another reduction as part of a plan to phase out the income tax over time without creating a funding crisis in state government.

Metcalf said the state spends too much and needs to save more because of its billions of dollars in debt even with its healthy $6 billion rainy day fund for emergencies but he thinks the tax reduction is good for the state’s people.

Bowman said decreasing the income tax will not help the state or its people.? He said the state needs to be more transparent with what it does with its money.

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

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‘A hard person not to like.’ Kentuckians remember Gov. Brereton Jones. https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/09/18/a-hard-person-not-to-like-kentuckians-remember-gov-brereton-jones/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/09/18/a-hard-person-not-to-like-kentuckians-remember-gov-brereton-jones/#respond Mon, 18 Sep 2023 14:55:53 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=9761

Kentucky's 58th governor, Brereton Jones will lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda on Monday. (KET screenshot)

Former Kentucky Gov. Brereton Jones, who emphasized health care reform and government ethics in his administration from 1991 to 1995 and who was a major figure in the state’s horse industry, has died at 84.

Gov. Andy Beshear announced the death late Monday on social media.

Gov. Brereton C. Jones portrait. (Kentucky Historical Society)

“I was sad to learn that former Governor and Lieutenant Gov. Brereton Jones has passed away,” said Beshear, a fellow Democrat. “Gov. Jones was a dedicated leader and distinguished thoroughbred owner who worked to strengthen Kentucky for our families. Please join Britainy and me in praying for Libby and his family.”

Beshear noted that the Jones family has asked for privacy, and that more information will be shared in the coming days.

Jones has been ill for several years.

U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Louisville said, “The people of Kentucky benefited from Governor Jones’ leadership, both when he was in public office and afterward when he dedicated himself to educating Kentuckians about our state’s unique cultural heritage.

“I know his leadership and public service will continue to serve as an inspiration to us all.”

Kentucky House Speaker David Osborne, R-Prospect, said Jones was “a good man and a fine man. He cared deeply about the people of our Commonwealth and his commitment to Kentucky remained a common thread in every aspect of his life, whether it be political, civic, business, or personal.

“One of the greatest hallmarks of his character was that he simply did not care who got the credit as long as the goal was accomplished. As governor, as well as in the three decades since leaving office, he found a way to balance progress with knowing what must be preserved. We saw it in the issues he tackled in office, as well as in his work to bring the equine industry together.”

While Kentucky lost a great leader, said Osborne, his family lost a husband, father and friend. “I hope they find comfort in knowing that the Commonwealth is better because of his efforts.”

Kentucky House Democratic leaders — Derrick Graham, Cherlynn Stevenson and Rachel Roberts — said in a statement, “We are saddened to learn of the passing of former Gov. Brereton Jones, and extend condolences to his family.

“He served Kentucky admirably as lieutenant governor and governor, twin roles in which he left an indelible mark on the commonwealth. He was a staunch advocate for improving health care access for all citizens; he embraced needed ethics reforms for government; he was a vocal supporter of our signature horse industry and state parks; and he helped clear the way for future constitutional offices to serve two consecutive terms.

“There is no doubt that Kentuckians are much better off because of Governor Jones’ public service.”

Former Kentucky governor and first lady, Brereton and Libby Jones. Brereton Jones has died at 84. (Airdrie Stud photo)

Keeneland President and CEO Shanon Arvin said Jones “was widely respected for his leadership and integrity, serving the Thoroughbred industry as a statesman and visionary and the Commonwealth of Kentucky as governor and lieutenant governor.

“His passion for horses and the land knew no bounds and culminated in his beloved Airdrie Stud, which for more than 50 years has been one of the world’s foremost breeding operations. He believed in racing and worked tirelessly to improve our sport as a founding member of the Breeders’ Cup and the Kentucky Equine Education Project, a member of The Jockey Club, and by championing formation of the Kentucky Breeders’ Incentive Fund.

“At Keen-----eland, we will remember Gov. Jones fondly as a breeder, owner, consignor --and a buyer of the highest caliber, and for being a valued member of ---our Advisory Board.? We will celebrate his life and contributions, and the tremendous legacy he leaves behind.”

Louisville strategic communications executive Chad Carlton, who covered the Jones administration for the Lexington Herald-Leader’s Frankfort bureau, said Jones was “a hard person not to like.”

“He really believed he could bring people together. He was most upset when he couldn’t do that all the time. Overall, he helped restore integrity to government.”

Brereton Chandler Jones was born June 27, 1939, in Gallipolis, Ohio, and was raised in West Virginia. He was a Republican member of the West Virginia House of Delegates and served as its GOP floor leader.

He left politics to run a real estate business. In 1970, he married Elizabeth “Libby” Lloyd,? whose family owned an estate in Kentucky’s Woodford County known as Airdrie Farm.? They had two children, Lucy and Bret.

Jones and his wife founded Airdrie Stud, a prominent Thoroughbred breeding operation.

In 1975, he changed his party registration to Democrat and was appointed to several boards and commissions by the late Gov. John Y. Brown Jr. and Gov. Martha Layne Collins.

In 1987, Jones won a bid for lieutenant governor and was not shy about saying he viewed it as a stepping stone to the governorship. At the time candidates for governor and lieutenant governor ran separate from each other.

As lieutenant governor, he had a strained relationship with then-Gov. Wallace Wilkinson. He did not help Wilkinson reach his goal of achieving gubernatorial succession, allowing governors to succeed themselves.

That did not come until Jones was governor, in no small part because he did not insist on being the first governor eligible to run for re-election. In 1992, the legislature approved and voters ratified a constitutional amendment allowing governors to succeed themselves.

Jones’ relationship also was frayed with the Kentucky General Assembly, primarily due to his comments about the federal Operation Boptrot investigation that uncovered corruption in the state legislature. He called it “a cleansing process.”

Besides working to strengthen ethics laws, Jones championed health care reform, especially universal health care for all Kentucky citizens. He did not achieve that goal but did sign into law reforms aimed at making health insurance available and affordable to all Kentuckians, including those who had been priced out of the market by insurers because of their health histories or pre-existing medical conditions. Kentucky could not sustain Jones’ state health insurance reforms. But they were enacted into federal law as part of the Affordable Care Act signed by President Barack Obama in 2010.

On Aug. 7, 1992, Jones and five others were on board the state helicopter when it crashed in Shelby County. Every one survived but Jones suffered back strain and a damaged kidney.

Brereton and Libby Jones pushed during his administration for creation of a state history center. In the final year of Jones’ governorship, the legislature approved $19.5 million to design and build the Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky History, named after the legendary University of Kentucky history professor and author.

After serving as governor, Jones focused more on the horse industry. He founded the Kentucky Equine Education Project, a non-profit established to support the industry.

Jones also headed the Kentucky Thoroughbred Commission and was treasurer of the Breeders’ Cup. Three horses bred at his farm have won the Kentucky Oaks since 2007.

The former governor also got involved in the radio and television business, while he and his wife were strong supporters of Pioneer Playhouse in Danville.

This article is republished from the Northern Kentucky Tribune, a nonprofit publication of the Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism.

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After losing hundreds of churches to LGBTQ rift,?United Methodists charter a new one in Erlanger https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/08/18/after-losing-hundreds-of-churches-to-lgbtq-rift-united-methodists-charter-a-new-one-in-erlanger/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/08/18/after-losing-hundreds-of-churches-to-lgbtq-rift-united-methodists-charter-a-new-one-in-erlanger/#respond Fri, 18 Aug 2023 21:07:51 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=8835

Bishop Leonard Fairley (Photo submitted)

As hundreds of United Methodist churches in Kentucky left the denomination over LGBTQ+ issues, some members disappointed with the disaffiliation wanted to remain United Methodists.

Despite the rift, Kentucky United Methodist Bishop Leonard Fairley remained optimistic about the denomination’s future, predicting that United Methodists “will show the love of God by starting new faith communities throughout Kentucky.”

Fairley on Sunday will help celebrate the first new faith community to officially join the United Methodist fold, Antioch United Methodist Church in Erlanger.

Fairley will preach at the 10 a.m. “chartering service” at the Receptions Event Center on 1379 Donaldson Highway. The media have been invited.

Worship service at Antioch. (Photo submitted)

Most of Antioch’s 75-member congregation belonged to other United Methodist churches but were not in the voting majority when those churches decided to leave the United Methodist Church (UMC). It took at least a two-thirds vote of a church’s participating members to disaffiliate. Those not seeking disaffiliation basically were left without a church.

Other churches may follow the route of Antioch, said Cathy Bruce, communications director for the Kentucky United Methodist Conference, noting that Northern Kentucky was “especially hit hard by disaffiliations.”

In Western Kentucky, she said, more than 50 people last month, also upset that their churches disaffiliated from the UMC, attended the launch of the United Methodist Church of Trigg County in Cadiz, but it has not yet scheduled to charter with the denomination.

“Sometimes it takes up to a year to get a church chartered,” Bruce said.? “Antioch has been meeting since March but just now is getting chartered.” Chartering involves making sure the church understands the various guiding points and beliefs of the United Methodist Conference.

Bruce also said another church has plans to form in the Lexington area made up of United Methodists who want to remain United Methodists.

History of the split

The disaffiliation movements started in January 2020 with a proposal to split the denomination over “fundamental differences” concerning homosexuality.

The disaffiliations picked up momentum with a decision by the UMC to allow congregations to keep their property if they voted by two-thirds of participating members to disaffiliate.

The exodus of Kentucky United Methodist churches was confirmed in June when delegates to the Kentucky Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church approved requests from 286 churches to leave the denomination that was formed in 1968. About 80 churches had already left in recent years.

Departing congregations ranged from Kings Mountain in Lincoln County, whose members voted 2-0 to disaffiliate, to Centenary in Lexington, where the vote was 511-45 in favor of disaffiliation.

A total of 369 United Methodist churches in the state conference with about 84,000 members decided not to leave the denomination. The Kentucky Conference of the UMC covers most, but not all, of the state.

Hindman Methodist Church in Knott County joined the new Global Methodist Church. (Photo courtesy of Hindman Methodist Church)

In the Kentucky conference, more than 100 of the almost 400 congregations that have left the United Methodist Church have been approved, applied or are inquiring about joining the Global Methodists, a more conservative Christian denomination.

Global Methodist doctrine does not recognize same-sex marriages or the ordination of openly gay Methodists. Neither does the United Methodist Church, which, during years of debate surrounding LGBTQ+ issues, has repeatedly upheld its stance against gay clergy and same-sex marriage.

But the issue has been debated in the United Methodist Church for years.

That debate came to a boil in 2016 after hundreds of United Methodist clergy came out as gay and a Western regional conference elected the first openly lesbian bishop, sparking the conservatives’ push to leave the church.

United Methodists may revisit the LGBTQ+ debate next year in Charlotte at the worldwide General Conference, the denomination’s highest legislative body, the first since 2019 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

But for now, the state conference will celebrate the addition of Antioch in Northern Kentucky.

The Rev. Caleb Wheat, who previously served at St. James United Methodist Church in Bowling Green with about 175 members, became pastor od Antioch at the end of June. St. James decided to stay with the United Methodists.

Wheat, 31, said this Sunday’s worship service at Antioch will include a special liturgy for chartering churches.? It will be preceded at 9 a.m. by a church “charge conference,” at which church officers will be formally elected to serve as representatives of the newly formed church.

“It is an exciting time for everyone involved with Antioch,” said Wheat.? “We especially want to thank Bishop Fairley for his guidance. Folks here have remained in the faith and in God’s love for all.? They came together after a tough situation to accomplish this together.”

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Joe Wright, a leader in Kentucky legislative independence movement, dies at 82 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/07/17/joe-wright-a-leader-in-kentucky-legislative-independence-dies-at-82/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/07/17/joe-wright-a-leader-in-kentucky-legislative-independence-dies-at-82/#respond Mon, 17 Jul 2023 22:41:43 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=7742

Joseph "Joe" Richard Wright, 1940-2023

Former state Sen. Joe Wright, a leader in the Kentucky General Assembly’s fight to become independent from the control of the governor more than four decades ago, died Saturday at Louisville’s Baptist East Hospital. He was 82.

Joseph “Joe” Richard Wright of Breckinridge County served in the state Senate from 1976 to 1992. From 1981 to 1992, he was the majority floor leader for the Democratic Party.

In 1978, Wright joined a group of Democratic senators led by the late John M. Berry Jr., in a push for legislative independence from the governor’s office in a direct challenge to their party’s leadership.

Berry and Wright were joined by senators Mike Moloney, David Karem, Lowell Hughes, Danny Meyer, Ed O’Daniel and John “Eck” Rose.?

The group was known as the Black Sheep Squadron. They demanded that the legislature be open, transparent, accountable and, above all, independent (that bills be heard regardless of the governor’s opinion).?

The movement started in the administration of Gov. Julian Carroll and flourished in the administration of Gov. John Y. Brown Jr. with support from Senate Republicans.

Wright, as Senate majority floor leader, became a pivotal, effective figure in the independence movement.

Wright and his colleagues then used their newfound independence to reform education and to pay for the sweeping improvements by enacting a penny increase in the sales tax and by reforming property tax collections. The Kentucky Education Reform Act of 1990 wrested direct governance of public schools from politicians and entrusted it to educators and parents.?

Asked why Wright was such an effective legislator, Moloney, a Lexington attorney who headed the Senate’s budget committee, said, “You could always count on what he had to say. Always.”

Moloney said Wright, a farmer from the tiny community of Harned, was a prime example of a citizen-legislator.? “No question about it.? He was one hell of a man.”

His obituary said Wright was born in the same house he would call home for his entire life on July 29, 1940.?

Karem, who served as Senate majority caucus chairman and majority floor leader, echoed Moloney’s words by saying Wright was “a man of his word.”

“When you sat down with Joe and he made a commitment to you, that commitment always was good.? I never once knew that he ever left a commitment.”

Karem also said Wright had “the strong capacity to communicate to every legislative area throughout the state.

“He was a farmer so he knew how to talk to people in rural areas and he had a strong affinity for urban areas and their cultures.? He was able to pull together a very diverse group of legislators.”

Wright “was certainly strong in defending the legislative process,” said Karem.

Karem recounted a breakfast meeting former Gov. Wallace Wilkinson scheduled with legislative leaders late in a session. Wilkinson had been making a strong pitch to allow governors to be given the opportunity to run for reelection and succeed themselves, starting with him.

Legislators liked the idea of gubernatorial succession but thought it should start with the next governor, said Karem.

“Gov. Wilkinson brought up the topic instantly at that breakfast and Joe, in a very calm, deliberate manner simply said, ‘Governor, that’s not going to happen.’”

Karem said that meeting lasted only a few more minutes.? Gov. Brereton Jones was able to see succession pass because he was willing to exempt the incumbent, himself, from its provisions.

Diana Taylor, a former Capitol reporter and chief of staff for Gov. Jones, said, Wright presented himself like a statesman.

“He was focused on what he was doing and did so in a calm, strong demeanor.? He actually was pleasant to deal with.”

Taylor said the power of the legislature has increased since the days of the Black Sheep.??

Before the Black Sheep, it was not unusual for the governor to tell the legislators what bills to pass.??

Since then, “we have seen a growing level of legislative independence.? What you seek is three equal branches of government.”

Wright’s funeral will be held at Harned Methodist Church in Harned on Friday, July 21, at 12 p.m. under the direction of Trent-Dowell Funeral Home. Visitation will be held at the church on Thursday, July 20, from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. and from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m at the church on the day of the funeral.? All times are Central.

‘Just as farming is more stewardship than ownership, so is public service. I do not own this seat. I’ve held it for awhile.’?

This is Joe Wright’s farewell address to the Kentucky Senate, delivered April 14, 1992.

Mr. President, members of the Senate…

As this session grew shorter, and this day and this moment approached, I found myself dreading it in ways I hadn’t imagined I would. I thought to not say anything. But of course I must. I cannot close out 17 years of my life with people I love and an institution I cherish, without saying goodbye.

As you know, I’ll be retiring from this Senate at year’s end. The time has simply come — both for me personally, and for the greater public good, I think. Some have tried to dissuade me, and I truly appreciate it; but I doubt I’m as irreplaceable as some have flattered me by saying.

As George Washington said in his Farewell Address: “I have the consolation to believe that, while choice and prudence invite me to quit the political scene, patriotism does not forbid it.”

Washington knew that one man can make a difference. He also knew that no living democracy is based on the presence or absence of any individual.

As you know, I’m a farmer. As a farmer, I know something about the idea of stewardship. The land I farm is, in every conventional sense, “mine.” But I know I will never truly own it. I can only use it for a time, and pass it on to someone else, someone who’ll come after; and when that time comes, I’ll pass it along in hope, and in faith, that the land will not just endure, but prosper.

My goal, every true farmer’s goal, is to leave the land a little better for my stewardship, a little more prepared to do the work of the good earth, a little more fertile for whoever follows.

That is the covenant of farming.

Just as there is a covenant of farming, there is a covenant of public service. And just as farming is more stewardship than ownership, so is public service. I do not own this seat. I’ve held it for awhile.?

When I first came to this chamber in 1976, I did not receive a lifetime appointment. I never took it as such. I was elected for a four-year term. And every four years I had to make a conscious decision to renew my covenant with the people who elected me. I knew the day would come that our covenant would end. I came hoping to stay eight years. I’ve been here 17.

Like the farmer I am, I have tried to leave the ground of this seat a little better for my work here, better prepared and better able to produce the works and fruits of democracy.

It’s not for me to say if I’ve succeeded or failed.

That is a judgment history will make.

But I would remind every member of this body that you too will pass on the seats you occupy, for you can never own them. Your seat preceded you and will succeed you. And you too will be judged by history, by those who come after, on the basis of how healthy, or how poor, is the soil of our democracy as symbolized by the health of this institution, the Kentucky General Assembly.

From my own perspective — the perspective of one whose time is near over — I can say its health is much improved over what I found here 17 years ago.

I was fortunate, I think, to have come here at a historic moment, and to serve in historic times. The historic moment we faced years ago was the arrival of what we call the legislative independence movement. In it, the Kentucky General Assembly asserted, and won, its proper prerogatives as a co-equal branch of government. This Legislature and this Commonwealth are better for it.

Such progress as we’ve made in recent years—from court reform in the ‘70s to education reform in the ‘90s—can be credited in large measure to the work of a forceful Legislature.

I know I’m identified with the legislative independence movement; I know I’m one of the last still here of those who set it in motion. I know I’m seen as a symbol for much of what has happened to the Kentucky General Assembly over the past two decades.

I’m comfortable in that role, because I’m proud to have played it.

But I also know that others along with me defined the legislative independence movement. I would name them all if I weren’t afraid to leave someone out. They know who they are. And so do you.

You know their names form the lore of this chamber, for I would say the legislative independence movement originated here, in the Senate. What was to be called the Black Sheep Squadron, a group of independence-minded senators, emerged here in 1974. By 1978, the Black Sheep were a force. And by 1979, the work we began culminated in passage of what is called the Kenton Amendment, a constitutional amendment with far-reaching consequences for legislative independence. It was, I think, a last nail in the coffin of improper executive-branch domination of state government. Out history since has been to consolidate and define the actual terms of legislative independence; to state in words and express through actions our proper role in the governance of this Commonwealth.

I also know, and want to stress, that each of you has been critical in that movement too. And you will continue to be. The legislative independence movement goes on—and you are that movement. For the true work of legislative independence is, finally, the everyday work of doing what the constitution calls upon you to do:

Function as a co-equal partner with the other two branches, in a spirit of compromise and goodwill, but with firm resolve to preserve and defend the legitimate role and legal prerogatives of this legislative branch.

That is, institutionally, your first duty.

I am confident you’ll meet that duty.

It is traditional, in American politics, for farewell speeches to include cautions. Anyone who’s been in politics long enough to warrant a farewell speech has supposedly learned a thing or two. Washington cautioned against sectionalism—and, interestingly enough, the encroachment of one branch of government into another.

(Wright is referring next to the BOPTROT scandal in which an FBI investigation of bribery resulted in multiple lawmakers, including a House speaker, going to prison.)

Moreover, events of the past two weeks have weighed heavy on me, and I know on many of you. To have the integrity of this institution called into question is a blow to the work so many of us have given our lives to; such allegations, even when they’re unproven, can never be taken lightly. For even the rumor of impropriety can shake the foundation of public trust on which this body is built.

I am saddened by this, as we all are. But I would say to you this can be a step forward rather than a step back, if we see it correctly as opportunity rather than defeat.

If we welcome this scrutiny, if we do not flinch, and so prove our commitment to the highest standards of public conduct, I think we will gain in stature with the people we serve. And if we move forward from these days with a renewed resolve to be impeccable in our conduct, if we redouble our efforts to earn and deserve the public trust, we will be a stronger institution for it.

With that in mind, I want to draw against whatever wisdom I may have gained in my years here, and issue some cautions of my own today.

I would caution you that a legislative body must be constantly on guard, to balance public interest with special interest. With legislative independence has come explosive growth in the attention this body receives from special interests. That’s not all bad. But it can be. And often is. We need to remember there’s an OVERALL public good that transcends individual issues. Our focus on that greater good must be steady.

I would caution you against a growing perception nationwide that while legislatures are quick to criticize the executive, legislatures are slow to police themselves and their perceived excesses.

I would caution you about the arrogance of power and loss of public trust that has afflicted certain other legislative bodies in recent years. We’ve seen that with Congress. Let’s not see it in Kentucky.

I would caution you to remember that this is—or should be—a deliberative body, not a reactive one. A modern Legislature often finds itself reacting in haste to a crush of events. It too seldom reflects on the things it’s doing.

I would caution you against the creeping professionalism that in modern America threatens to turn any body of Jeffersonian citizen-lawmakers into a chamber of isolated political professionals.

Similarly, I would caution you against the ever-expanding and ever-growing demands on a legislator’s time, demands that make it almost impossible for a “citizen,” in a true sense, to serve this body.

Finally, I would caution you that the moral and ethical fiber of any democratic institution are the strands that hold it together. When moral and ethical fiber are lost, the institution itself is lost and irrelevant, for its bond of trust with the people is shattered.

These are not criticisms; they are reminders. Reminders that vigilance against abuse must never falter. Reminders that, as a human institution, we may always seek, but surely never reach, perfection. Reminders that, in knowing we’re not perfect, we can guard against our human failings. For this too is the work of legislative independence: Legislative responsibility.

To paraphrase Wendell Berry, a great Kentucky writer, brother of our friend John, and fellow farmer: If we had known the difficulty, we would not have come even this far. If what I ask of you seems hard, remember how far we’ve come on a hard road. We must defend what we’ve gained, and press on.

Before I close, there are some people I must thank. “Thanks” is such a poor expression of what I feel, but to say it publicly seems the least I can do.

Thanks to my wife and family, who are here today. Without their love and support and encouragement I doubt I could have survived this life, let alone 17 years in the Legislature.

Thanks to my constituents—my friends and neighbors—for their faith and trust in me, which I hope I’ve earned and earned again over the years.

Thanks to LRC staff, the best staff in the world; and to my personal staff, for dedication not only to me, but to the people of Kentucky, above and beyond any call of duty.

And I hate to single anyone out, but I have to mention the Senator from Harlan, my friend, for his good companionship and good conversation over the years; the Senator from Fayette 13, whose dedication to public service, often at great cost to himself, exemplifies what is best about a citizen-Legislature; and the Senator from Clark, who has been both friend and ally in the struggles of recent years.

I want to thank the other members of Senate leadership, past and present, who have helped me and supported me and made my job much easier.

I would also like to thank the members of the minority party, for their under-appreciated contribution to the dialogue that takes place in this chamber; and to the members of House leadership, with whom I’ve always had a good working relationship.

As I say, I’m proud of my time here. I’m also proud of you, and of every senator I’ve served with. Thank you, each of you.

I’m proud too of my constituents. In the weeks leading up to this day, many well-wishers in Frankfort have said kind things about the independence of judgment they say I’ve shown. I always reply I was blessed: At no time, ever, did I feel my re-election to office, or my re-election as majority leader, depended on how I voted on any particular issue.

I always felt free to make those decisions based on my own best judgment. That implied great trust. I always tried to live up to that trust. And I always sought to return it. As both lawmaker and Senate leader, I’ve tried to strike a balance between tough-mindedness and tender-heartedness. That’s a thin rail to balance on, believe me.

By almost any measure, I’ve given the best years of my working life to this job. From age 35 to age 52. I have reached a point in my life where the old fire for this particular job has left me. And take it from someone who knows: To do this job right, you need that fire.

Lacking it, I feel obliged to step down. Knowing when to move on is the last, best service we can pay our constituents and our Commonwealth.

I’ve been asked if I’ve left anything undone, an item on my agenda I’d like to see accomplished. The answer, honestly, is no. I have never had individual goals. All I ever really wanted was to bring credibility to the process. To serve and leave with people feeling good about my time here. I think—I hope—I’ve done that.

As I survey this chamber on my leaving, I’m encouraged at what I see. So many new faces have joined us this session—bright, qualified, committed faces, in many cases young, in all cases full of the passion for public service that drives this body onward.

I leave this chamber in good hands, this patch of democracy fertile.

Thank you.

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Kentucky Methodists tally congregations lost to LGBTQ rift as a conservative alternative grows https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/06/26/kentucky-methodists-tally-congregations-lost-to-lgbtq-rift-as-a-conservative-alternative-grows/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/06/26/kentucky-methodists-tally-congregations-lost-to-lgbtq-rift-as-a-conservative-alternative-grows/#respond Mon, 26 Jun 2023 09:50:47 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=7044

Hindman Methodist Church in Knott County joined the new Global Methodist Church. (Photo courtesy of Hindman Methodist Church)

Jacob Wilson, 28, was excited about starting as the pastor of a church in southeastern Kentucky on June 25. Both he and his new congregation in Hindman had left the United Methodist Church in opposition to gay clergy and same-sex marriage — and joined the new Global Methodist Church.

Jacob and Tyler Wilson

Subscribing to conservative views of the Bible, Global Methodists are a Christian Protestant denomination claiming 1,700 congregations and 1,200 clergy around the world.

In Kentucky, more than 100 of the almost 400 congregations that have left the United Methodist Church have been approved, applied or are inquiring about joining the Global Methodists, said Mike Powers, a retired United Methodist pastor in Lexington who is spearheading efforts to attract disaffiliated churches to the new denomination.?

The exodus of Kentucky Methodists was confirmed earlier this month when delegates to the Kentucky Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church approved requests from 286 churches to leave the denomination that was formed in 1968. About 80 churches had already left in recent years.?

Departing congregations ranged from Kings Mountain in Lincoln County, whose members voted 2-0 to disaffiliate, to Centenary in Lexington, where the vote was 511-45 in favor of disaffiliation.

Wilson’s 75-member Hindman Methodist Church voted 42-1 to leave the United Methodist Church.?

Split helping spawn a new denomination

Wilson resigned in May as reporter/editor of The Anderson News in Lawrenceburg to move with his wife, Taylor Wilson, to the Knott County seat. He formerly had been an associate pastor at Versailles United Methodist Church and pastor at Camargo in Montgomery County and Mt. Carmel in Fleming County.? He was with the United Methodist Church for about six years and then departed, last attending New Harvest Assembly of God in Frankfort.??

“The Global Methodist Church is a very loving denomination and welcomes everyone,” said Wilson. “The United Methodist Church has had too many disagreements.”?

“I do not bear ill will for the LGBTQ community. Gays and lesbians will be welcome at Hindman, a church that follows the Bible,” Wilson said.

Global Methodist doctrine does not recognize same-sex marriages or the ordination of openly gay Methodists. Neither does the United Methodist Church, which, during years of debate surrounding LGBTQ+ issues, has repeatedly upheld its stance against gay clergy and same-sex marriage. That debate came to a boil in 2016 after hundreds of United Methodist clergy came out as gay and a Western regional conference elected the first openly lesbian bishop, sparking the conservatives’ push to leave the church.?????????

350 remaining churches will start ‘new faith communities,’ says bishop

Remaining in Kentucky are about 350 United Methodist Church congregations with more than 84,000 members.

United Methodists may revisit the LGBTQ+ debate next year in Charlotte at the worldwide General Conference, the denomination’s highest legislative body, the first since 2019 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.?

Leonard Fairley

The disaffiliation movements started in January 2020 with a proposal to split the denomination. The disaffiliations picked up momentum with a decision by the United Methodist Church to allow congregations to keep their property if they voted by two-thirds of participating members to disaffiliate.

Despite the church losses, Leonard Fairley, resident bishop of the Louisville Area, which includes the Kentucky Conference in the Southeastern Jurisdiction of the United Methodist Church, is optimistic about the denomination’s future.

Our remaining members are ready to step into a new reality with a leaner, nimbler desire to ‘Show the Love of God’ – which just happened to be the theme of our 2023 gathering,” Fairley said in a letter to Kentucky media. Fairley also wrote, “We will show the love of God by starting new faith communities throughout Kentucky.”

Emotional and sad

Powers, 70, who recently was named president pro tempore for the Global Methodist Church’s MidSouth Region that includes all of Kentucky, southwestern Virginia, mid-to eastern Tennessee and two counties in Georgia, said the church is “a fellowship of like-minded people.”

Mike Powers

Powers has served as a pastor in Hindman, Science Hill, Harrodsburg, Morehead, State Street in Bowling Green and at First Church in Lexington.

Citing passages from the Bible’s New and Old Testaments, the Global Methodist website says:

  • “Human sexuality is a gift of God that is to be affirmed … within the legal and spiritual covenant of a loving and monogamous marriage between one man and one woman.”?
  • “We are saddened by all expressions of sexual behavior, including pornography, polygamy, and promiscuity, that do not recognize the sacred worth of each individual or that seek to exploit, abuse, objectify, or degrade others.”
  • “While affirming a scriptural view of sexuality and gender, we … are committed to being a safe place of refuge, hospitality, and healing for any who may have experienced brokenness in their sexual lives.”?

Both Powers and Wilson said the disaffiliation process has been emotional and sad but believe the Global Methodist Church is the way to go.

“I respect my friends in the United Methodist Church who do not agree with me.? They are not my enemies,” Powers said. “This is a great honor for me after retiring to work on this. I just want to connect people to the love of Jesus.

“Everything we have been doing for the Global Methodist Church in the last seven months has been voluntary.? We think what we are doing is that important.

“I consider all this is about my children’s children’s children.”

Read Bishop Leonard Fairley’s letter

United Methodism in Kentucky: Showing the Love of God

When United Methodists from throughout Kentucky met in Owensboro June 4-7 for our 2023 Annual Conference, much was made in news reports about the 286 churches that were approved to leave the denomination.

We understand the interest.

Since 2019, the Kentucky Annual Conference has provided five opportunities for churches to disaffiliate under a provision created by the United Methodist General Conference for congregations that are conflicted over the denomination’s long-standing debate over human sexuality.

However, there is more to our identity as United Methodists than difficult times of discernment around human sexuality. We want to share who we are with others.

So, who are United Methodist, exactly?

In Kentucky, we have United Methodist churches that span almost the entire commonwealth.

Together, the United Methodist denomination in Kentucky is 350 churches with 84,000 members. These are churches and people committed to Christ and to the communities where they serve.

Our remaining members are ready to step into a new reality with a leaner, nimbler desire to “Show the Love of God” – which just happened to be the theme of our 2023 gathering.

As United Methodists, both clergy and non-clergy, we are called to serve as disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world.

We will show the love of God by starting new faith communities throughout Kentucky.

The Rev. Dr. Kimberly Pope-Seiberling, the conference’s director of New Church Development, sees a bright future: “Every week I hear about a new church who wants to do something new and dream big dreams.”

We show the love of God by feeding the hungry. Our churches provide sit-down meals, sponsor food pantries, and participate in backpack ministries.

We show the love of God by rebuilding communities after natural disasters. Between the December 2021 tornadoes in western Kentucky and the July 2022 flooding in eastern Kentucky, The United Methodist Church has answered the call to help our neighbor by providing housing in the immediate aftermath and by sending teams to help with rebuilding.

We show the love of God by introducing children and youth to that love at summer camp. Each year our two camps, Loucon and Aldersgate, host hundreds of children and teens. We also robustly support the mission of the Kentucky United Methodist Children’s Homes.

We show the love of God by nurturing young adults with our campus ministries. We have active ministries on 11 campuses in Kentucky, including all eight public universities.

We show the love of God in our churches by nurturing all age groups with spiritual growth and fellowship opportunities.

What fuels this desire in United Methodists to continually show the love of God? It is in our DNA; we are a denomination and a people born of the movement of the Holy Spirit.

We hold the same beliefs about Jesus that the church has held for 2,000 years.

We share the same core beliefs that nondenominational churches, Catholics, Baptists, Anglicans, and others have about Jesus. The Bible is the most significant voice and guide of the way we live as Christians. We believe that God gave us the Bible and that it shows us the truth and trains us to live God’s way.

We believe that God loves everyone. As John 3:17 says, “God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world but in order that the world might be saved through him.”

We know that God gives us his love and power so that we can have a relationship with him.??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? We believe that Jesus is God’s Son, and that Jesus is God. We believe that he died for everyone, came back to life, went back to heaven, gave us his Spirit, and will return for the church.

We also believe everyone is welcome in church. Whatever our past, Jesus has a place for each of us in his family and at his dinner table. We strive to follow the “3 simple rules” of John Wesley, Methodism’s founder: “Do no harm, do good, stay in love with God.

United Methodists are a people of a dynamic, sustaining movement. We bless those who have recently left the denomination, and we pray that Jesus will bless their ministries. Meanwhile, for those of us who remain United Methodist, there is much work to do.

For those interested in connecting with a United Methodist church in Kentucky, go to www.kyumc.org/churches.

Leonard Fairley has been bishop of the Kentucky Annual Conference since 2016.?

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

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United Methodist Church in Kentucky?losing congregations to rift over LGBTQ inclusion https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/06/02/united-methodist-church-in-kentucky-losing-congregations-to-divisions-over-lgbtq-inclusion/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/06/02/united-methodist-church-in-kentucky-losing-congregations-to-divisions-over-lgbtq-inclusion/#respond Fri, 02 Jun 2023 09:50:19 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=6262

The church formerly known as Seddon United Methodist in Maysville painted over part of its name as members decided to leave the denomination. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Jack Brammer)

On a cold morning last winter, some of the 50 to 75 members of a church on Forest Avenue in Maysville used pens in their small, but beloved, house of worship for a most symbolic action.

They carefully used the sharp points to cut out the word “United” on the front of their hymn books and then colored in the empty space.

All that was left to read on the hymnals was Seddon Methodist Church.

To further highlight that Seddon was leaving the United Methodist Church, light red paint was used to obscure the word “United” on the awning over the church’s front door.? It now reads “Seddon Methodist Church.”? Also, a large metal cross with a flame — the symbol of the United Methodist Church — was removed from the church and its van.

Symbol of the United Methodist Church

Seddon, which started preaching and teaching the Bible in 1872 and joined the United Methodist Conference in 1968, is one of scores of churches in Kentucky and the nation that has disaffiliated from the United Methodist Church over a long debate about gay rights.

Last December the Kentucky Conference announced that 57 of its churches had disaffiliated. Over the last four years, 80 have left the United Methodist Church in Kentucky. About 663 with more than 150,000 members remain in the state as of early this year. Among Christian denominations in Kentucky, United Methodists trail Southern Baptists with 904,352 members and Catholics with 356,064 members.

Disaffiliation will be very much on the minds of delegates to the Kentucky Methodists’ Annual Conference that begins Sunday and runs through Wednesday at the Owensboro Convention Center.?

The conference will review more church requests to exit the United Methodist Church. It is to approve them by the end of June.

In that group will be Seddon. Also, Centenary in suburban Lexington with its more than 3,700 members will be on the list. ?First United Methodist Church in downtown Lexington with its 1,643 members did not vote on disaffiliation and decided to stay with the United Methodist Church.

Todd Nelson

Similar scenarios are playing out across the nation.? Emotions run high, especially for longtime members of churches.

“It’s a very sad time for our denomination,” said Lu-Ann Farrar, a member of Lexington’s First United Methodist Church.

Her minister, Todd Nelson, said he understands that the total of disaffiliated churches in Kentucky since 2019 will rise to about 380 once this year’s requests are approved.?

“That will be about half of the United Methodist churches in Kentucky since the voting to disaffiliate began a few years ago,” he said.?

?“The split in the church is here,” he said. “We’re just seeing now what the count will be of those that leave and those that stay.”

Leonard Fairley, resident bishop of the Louisville Area, which includes the Kentucky Conference in the Southeastern Jurisdiction of The United Methodist Church, did not reply to numerous questions over the last four months from the Kentucky Lantern to him and his staff in their offices in Crestwood about the disaffiliation process and the reasons for it.

Leonard Fairley

He first asked the Lantern to submit its questions in writing but did not respond to them though he has pledged transparency.?

In his statement in a report to conference delegates in Owensboro, Fairley said,Sisters and brothers in Christ, this is a historic Annual Conference. One that brings with it a sense of both grief and joy as we mourn the loss of our sisters and brothers to disaffiliation.?

“However, we cannot and must not lose ourselves in the hopelessness of despair. We must exhibit the courage to live into the audacious promises of God that come when we love one another.”

Taylor W. Burton Edwards

The Rev. Taylor W. Burton Edwards, director of Ask the United Methodist Church, in Nashville, Tennessee, did provide information to the Lantern about the disaffiliation process.?

How disaffiliation came about

Disaffiliation in the United Methodist Church started with a rift over LGBTQ issues that has been continuing for years. The debate on disaffiliation has taken a circuitous route.

Even though the denomination has repeatedly voted to keep its traditional stance on marriage as only between a man and a woman, conservatives complain that progressives in the denomination have repeatedly ignored the rules.

The debate reached a boiling point in 2016 after hundreds of United Methodist clergy across the nation came out as gay and when a Western regional conference elected the first openly lesbian bishop.

In 2016 at the denomination’s worldwide meeting, held every four years and known as the General Conference, a special commission was formed to review the church’s policies on sexuality.

That sparked creation of a conservative advocacy group known as the Wesleyan Covenant Association, which invited United Methodist churches to join to push for stricter policies on sexuality.

In a special session of the General Conference in 2019, delegates did not change the denomination’s position that homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching. But traditionalists still were not satisfied.

The Wesleyan Covenant Association said “a parting of ways is the only viable way forward.”??

The General Conference signed off on a plan at the 2019 session to allow churches to disaffiliate based on views on sexuality.

Disaffiliation votes have been occurring over the last few years. They are to end this year.

The United Methodist Church has not held a General Conference since 2019 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The next General Conference is in 2024 in Charlotte, North Carolina. In 2020, the denomination had about 6.3 million members and 30,543 churches in the United States. Worldwide, it had nearly 13 million members and 43,409 churches.

Highlights of the disaffiliation process

A church vote must be held within 120 days after the district superintendent calls for the church meeting. The decision to disaffiliate must be approved by a two-thirds majority of the professing members of the local church present at the vote.

The local church must pay to the United Methodist Church any unpaid apportionments for the 12 months prior to disaffiliation, as well as an additional 12 months of apportionments.?

The disaffiliated church also must pay its share of the pension liability for active and retired clergy, as well as its share of medical liability for retired clergy and surviving spouses.

It’s possible for the congregation to retain much or all of its church property and assets. There have been some court cases across the nation involving disputes between disaffiliated congregations and the United Methodist Church.

Some members who disagree with their church’s vote have moved to different churches. Any United Methodist minister who wants to stay with the United Methodist Church but presides over a disaffiliated church can be transferred.

Disaffiliation is complete only when all payments due are made in full, the annual conference has approved the motion of disaffiliation and the effective date of disaffiliation set by the annual conference is reached.?

?A disaffiliated church

Grace on the Hill Community Church.

Grace on the Hill Community Church, off Cumberland Falls Highway in Corbin, was one of the first large churches in Kentucky to leave the United Methodist Church in June 2022. It has a membership of about 360.

Scott Wilson

It is now a non-denominational church. Among its beliefs spelled out on its website is that “the practice of homosexuality and cohabitation outside of marriage is not compatible with Scripture or the will of God.”

“This is a conservative church as is much of Southeastern Kentucky,” said its pastor, Scott Wilson. He said even an openly gay member of the church voted to disaffiliate. He declined to identify the person.

“We do invite everyone to come to our church and worship the Lord,” said Wilson. “We love everybody. There’s no place for hating anyone but we believe the Bible tells us how we should live.”

?List of Kentucky churches that disaffiliated last year

The official list of Kentucky churches leaving the United Methodist Church this year won’t be known until late June or so.?

The Kentucky Annual Conference, at a special meeting last December, voted 332 to 29 to accept the requests of 57 churches ?to disaffiliate.

According to its website, Bishop Fairley told the group, “There is nothing easy about separating from the people who have shared a significant part of your life.”?

He mentioned shared ministries and events, such as working side by side on mission teams for major disasters in Kentucky, a journey to the Holy Land, camping ministries, and helping the United Methodist Children’s Homes and the United Methodist retirement communities, adding that “there is so much we have done together in the name of Jesus Christ.”

“It will always be my prayer, somehow that by the power of the Holy Spirit, we can still together be about joyfully worshiping Christ, offering salvation, by offering help, healing and hospitality to all God’s children,” Fairley said.

He also said that despite the grief and sorrow, he believes that “God is up to something supernaturally amazing and mysteriously extraordinary,” and that the United Methodist Church’s best years still are ahead.

Here are the 57 departing churches, by district, in Kentucky announced last December.??

More are to come.

Bluegrass: Early’s Chapel, Mortonsville, Mt. Zion (Shakertown), Perryville.

Heartland: Cedar Grove, Overdale.

Kentucky East: Belfry, Buchanan Chapel, Cannonsburg Trinity, Catlettsburg, East Fork, Hardy, Olive Hill, Tollesboro.

Lexington: Bybee, Gunns Chapel, Herrington, Preachersville, Ruddles Mill, Shiloh.

Northern Kentucky: Fosters Chapel, Goddards Chapel, Melbourne, Milton, Morningview, Owenton, Piqua, Shiloh.

Owensboro: Big Springs Corners, Fairview.

Pennyrile: Bethel, Dixie, McMurray Chapel, Stuart Chapel.

South Central: Barnetts Creek, Boyds Creek, Campground, Center, Christies Chapel, Coffeys Chapel, Cosby, French Valley, McKendree Chapel, New Bethel, Old Zion, Park, Russell Springs, Shiloh, Walkers Chapel.

South East: Corbin Trinity, Fellowship, Macedonia, Pleasant View, Science Hill, Twin Branch, Whitesburg, Williamsburg First.

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Republican Greg Elkins wins special election in 28th state Senate District https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/briefs/republican-greg-elkins-wins-special-election-in-28th-state-senate-district/ Wed, 17 May 2023 03:54:47 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?post_type=briefs&p=5788

Former Clark County Magistrate Greg Elkins, a Republican, won a special election Tuesday to fill a vacancy in Central Kentucky’s 28th state Senate District.

The vacancy was created when Republican Ralph Alvarado left the seat Jan. 6 to become commissioner for the Tennessee Department of Health.

Elkins, chief executive officer of Central Kentucky Hauling, defeated Democrat Robert Sainte and independent Richard Henderson in Tuesday’s contest.

He will serve the remainder of Alvarado’s term, which ends in 2026.

The district covers Bath, Clark, Montgomery, Menifee and part of Fayette counties.

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Secretary of State Adams survives challenge from election deniers https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/05/16/secretary-of-state-adams-survives-challenge-from-election-deniers/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/05/16/secretary-of-state-adams-survives-challenge-from-election-deniers/#respond Wed, 17 May 2023 03:25:25 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=5783

(Abbey Cutrer)

Michael Adams’ gloomy prediction last week that he might lose to two election deniers in Tuesday’s Republican primary election for Kentucky secretary of state did not materialize and the state’s top election official since 2019 has a chance to run against Democrat Charles “Buddy” Wheatley in the Nov. 7 general election.

The race for secretary of state was one of five state constitutional races Tuesday other than governor setting up this fall’s statewide races. They are called down ticket races.

Here’s a look at each.

Kentucky Secretary of State

Adams had primary opposition from Steve Knipper of Erlanger, who was chief of staff to former Lt. Gov. Jenean Hampton when Matt Bevin was governor, and former state Rep. Allen Maricle of Bullitt County.

Unofficial results showed Adams with about 64% of the vote, compared to 27% for Knipper and 10% for Maricle.

Knipper spent much of last year traveling the state declaring that there was fraud in the election results of Bevin’s 2019 loss to Democrat Andy Beshear and in the 2020 presidential election that Donald Trump lost to Joe Biden.

In his term as secretary of state, Adams introduced major changes to Kentucky’s voting laws and significantly purged the registered voter rolls of more than 100,000 people who have died or moved out of state.

Adams was criticized by some Republicans for working closely with Beshear to make voting easier during the COVID-19 pandemic,

Adams, of Thornhill in Jefferson County will face Wheatley, a former state representative from Covington, in the fall election.

Wheatley, a retired Covington fire chief, was present Tuesday night at Beshear’s victory rally at the Kentucky History Center in Frankfort.

He said he will “open up” more voting opportunities for Kentuckians and will be willing to debate Adams.

Auditor

Republican Allison Ball of Prestonsburg, who has been state treasurer since 2015, garnered more than 72% of the vote in the GOP primary election against political newcomer Derek Petteys of Lexington in unofficial results.

The current state auditor, Republican Mike Harmon, has reached his two-term limit as auditor and decided to run for governor.

Ball will face Democrat Kimberly “Kim” Reeder of Frankfort.

Reeder had no opposition in the Democratic primary for auditor. She is a tax attorney, and a graduate of Yale University, Duke and the University of North Carolina College of Law.

She said she hopes to utilize her years of experience as a tax attorney to “eliminate waste and abuse where it exists.”

Reeder, a native of Rowan County, has also spent time in the classroom, teaching at Rowan County High School, Holmes High School in northern Kentucky, Morehead State University, and in cooperation with the Governor’s Scholars Program.

Attorney General

There were no contested races for attorney general in Tuesday’s primary elections.
However, Republican Russell Coleman and Democrat Pamela Stevenson will compete against each other in November.

Coleman, a former U.S. attorney and counsel for U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell, describes himself as “a pro-life, pro-family conservative Republican who has the hard-won experience to keep Kentucky families safe.”

Stevenson is a state legislator from Louisville, a Baptist minister and spent 27 years in the Air Force. She grew up with her life and community centered around the church founded by her grandfather: Oak Grove Missionary Baptist Church, in the heart of Louisville.

She says the values she learned there — “faith, family, and service” — called her into a career of service as a Judge Advocate General attorney in the U.S. Air Force and as the founder of a nonprofit providing free legal services to veterans.

She said she will be the “People’s Lawyer,” protecting Kentucky families from big business, corrupt politicians and scammers.

Agriculture commissioner

Former state Rep. Jonathan Shell of Garrard County turned back state Rep. Richard Heath of Mayfield to win Tuesday’s GOP primary for state agriculture commissioner.

Unofficial results had Shell with 57% of the vote and Heath with 43%.

In the Democratic primary, Sierra Enlow defeated Mikael Malone, 59% to 41% in unofficial results.

Enlow grew up on a family farm in LaRue County and today is an economic development consultant to counties and companies.

Treasurer

The two candidates for state treasurer in November will be?Republican Mark Metcalf of Lancaster against Democrat Michael Bowman of Louisville.

In the Republican contest, Metcalf defeated Andrew Cooperrider of Lexington, a coffee shop owner who defied Beshear’s mandate during the COVID-19 pandemic to close his coffee shop, and O.C. “OJ” Oleka of Frankfort, who is president of Oleka Management Consultant.

Bowman, the Democratic candidate, has served in various leadership positions in Louisville, including Parks Alliance and the Southwest Festival Committee.

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Gov. Andy Beshear handily wins Democratic nomination in Kentucky primary https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/05/16/gov-andy-beshear-handily-wins-democratic-nomination-in-kentucky-primary/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/05/16/gov-andy-beshear-handily-wins-democratic-nomination-in-kentucky-primary/#respond Wed, 17 May 2023 01:13:51 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=5750

Gov. Andy Beshear seen on the night he was elected in November 2019. (Photo by John Sommers II/Getty Images)

A crowd of several hundred joined Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear in shouting “Four more years” at a victory rally for Beshear early Tuesday night at the Kentucky History Center in downtown Frankfort.

Beshear trounced his two opponents in the Democratic primary election for governor — Peppy Martin and Geoff Young — and now faces Republican
Daniel Cameron in the Nov. 7 general election.

Beshear, with his wife, Britainy, and their two children, Will and Lila, at his side, started speaking about 7:10 p.m. and chided the Republican candidates for governor for trying to get the job by tearing down each other.

He said viewers who watched their TV ads must think the GOP candidates “are all WOKE.”

Beshear then rattled off some of his accomplishments in office — lowest unemployment rate in the state’s history, 46,000 more jobs than before the COVID-19 pandemic, a half-billion dollars for clean water, expansion of broadband, use of medical cannabis, sports betting and a new bridge between Covington and Cincinnati without tolls.

In his next four-year term, Beshear said his goals include four-laning the entire Mountain Parkway in Eastern Kentucky, passing universal pre-kindergarten and building on the state’s economic success.

Before Beshear spoke, his running mate, Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman, asked the crowd to “put your faith in us one more time.”

Beshear’s father, former Gov. Steve Beshear, and mother, former first lady Jane Beshear, also took to the stage to campaign for their son.

The elder Beshear said Kentuckians were hungry for leadership four years ago after a rocky term of Republican Gov. Matt Bevin.

“They found that leadership in Andy Beshear and Jacqueline Coleman,” said the former governor and urged the crowd “to fight” through the Nov. 7 general election.

He then noted that Tuesday’s Republican gubernatorial primary generated among the lowest voter turnout for the party in the state’s history.

Several prominent Democrats attended the rally, including Gov. Beshear senior adviser Rocky Adkins, former Lt. Gov. Crit Luallen and Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg.

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‘Down ticket’ races include election denier’s challenge of Republican secretary of state https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/05/11/down-ticket-races-include-election-deniers-challenge-of-republican-secretary-of-state/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/05/11/down-ticket-races-include-election-deniers-challenge-of-republican-secretary-of-state/#respond Thu, 11 May 2023 09:50:42 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=5560

(Getty Images)

Michael Adams

The harsh words Michael G. Adams and Steve Knipper have exchanged started long before they became rival candidates in Tuesday’s Republican primary election for Kentucky secretary of state.

Adams, who has held the office of top state election official since 2019 and is seeking a second four-year term, and Knipper, who was chief of staff to former Lt. Gov. Jenean Hampton when Matt Bevin was governor, battled much of last year over election integrity.

Adams has introduced major changes to Kentucky’s voting laws and has significantly purged the registered voter rolls of more than 100,000 people who have died or moved out of state.

Steve Knipper

He has not been shy in criticizing Knipper for unsubstantiated election fraud conspiracy theories in Kentucky’s 2019 race for governor, the 2020 presidential race and several other races across the state.

Adams, who has been chided by some Republicans for working closely with Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear to make voting easier during the COVID-19 pandemic, claims he has improved voting in Kentucky while Knipper and other election conspiracy theorists have sounded off with no evidence.

Adams, of Thornhill in Jefferson County? and Knipper, of Independence in Kenton County, will appear on the May 16 GOP ballot, along with another Republican, former state Rep. Allen Maricle of Lebanon Junction in Bullitt County.

The winner will face former Democratic state Rep. Charles “Buddy” Wheatley in the Nov. 7 general election.

The secretary of state race is one of five constitutional offices, other than governor, for which the two major political parties – Republican and Democrat – will select party nominees next week in what are called “down ticket” races.

Other state constitutional races on this year’s ballot besides governor are auditor, attorney general, agriculture commissioner and treasurer. All these constitutional offices pay $139,724 a year except governor, which pays $164,355 a year.

Here’s a closer look at each race:

Secretary of state

Adams defeated former Miss America 2000 Heather French Henry, a Democrat, to become secretary of state in 2019.

He holds a law degree from Harvard Law School and a bachelor’s degree from the University of Louisville.? He also clerked for a federal judge and worked on a U.S. Senate campaign before serving as deputy general counsel to Republican Gov. Ernie Fletcher.? In the second Bush administration, he was called to Washington for appointment as counsel to the U.S. deputy attorney general.

In 2007, Adams began full-time private practice in election law, first as general counsel to the Republican Governors Association and later opening a national practice in the field. In 2016, he was appointed to the Kentucky State Board of Elections.

Allen Maricle

As secretary of state, his first major legislative accomplishment was passage of a photo ID requirement for voters. The legislature approved more of his election reforms in 2021.

Knipper, an unsuccessful GOP nominee for secretary of state in 2015 and a former member of the Erlanger City Council,? filed to run in January against Adams. He has worked in data analysis and cybersecurity. He was immediately endorsed by Hampton and co-worker Adrienne Southworth, who is now a state senator from Lawrenceburg.

Last year, Knipper and Southworth conducted so-called “Integrity” tours across the state, claiming election fraud and aiding recount petitioners.-- Adams chastised them for lack of evidence and accused them of fraud.

The Boone County Republican Party, known for its liberty wing, accused Adams of “launching a public wave of gratuitous, ad hominem attacks” and making “false, defamatory and gratuitous allegations” against the recount petitioners.

Adams noted that multiple judges had dismissed the recount petitions, as “the Secretary of State and judges know more about election law than the authors of this resolution.”

Buddy Wheatley

When announcing that he would seek a second term, Adams said: “The wrong person winning this position could do real harm to our election process.”

Besides battling each other in the primary, Adams and Knipper face another challenger, Maricle. He served two terms in the state House and is calling for more transparency and integrity in the office.

The lone Democrat in the race is Wheatley, a retired Covington fire chief and two-term state representative who lost his reelection bid.

Wheatley is calling for more polling places, longer voting hours, an extension of early voting from three days to two weeks, allowing independents and other registered voters to participate in primary elections and the elimination of a straight-ticket voting option.

Besides running elections, the secretary of state oversees business filings in the state and public notary commissions.

Auditor

Allison Ball

The Kentucky auditor conducts audits of state government’s agencies.? In other words, the auditor serves as a watchdog for Kentucky taxpayers — ensuring public funds are accounted for and used appropriately in accordance with state laws and regulations.

The current state auditor, Republican Mike Harmon, has reached his two-term limit as auditor and decided to run for governor.

In the Republican primary next week are Allison Ball of Prestonsburg, ending two terms as state treasurer, and Derek Petteys of Lexington. The lone Democrat running for the office is Kimberly “Kim” Reeder of Frankfort.

Ball says she has delivered on her promise to serve as a watchdog of taxpayer dollars as treasurer and will maintain the same mentality as auditor.

Derek Petteys

As treasurer, she said she has returned $142 million in unclaimed property to Kentuckians, more property in a single term than any state treasurer in Kentucky history.

Petteys, of Lexington, immediately tells the voter on his campaign website that he is “not a career politician.”

He says he has been “a proven leader in project and financial management for nearly 30 years.

“Identifying waste, fraud, and mismanagement is key to running a successful business and it should be the same in government,” he said. “It’s all about finding and fixing problems and holding people accountable. That’s exactly what we need in a state auditor.”

Kim Reeder

Reeder of Frankfort has no opposition in the Democratic primary for auditor. She is a tax attorney, and a graduate of Yale University, Duke and the University of North Carolina College of Law.

She said she hopes to utilize her years of experience as a tax attorney to “eliminate waste and abuse where it exists.”

Reeder, a native of Rowan County, has also spent time in the classroom, teaching at Rowan County High School, Holmes High School in northern Kentucky, Morehead State University, and in cooperation with the Governor’s Scholars Program.

Attorney general

Russell Coleman

The state attorney general is Kentucky’s chief law enforcement official.

The current attorney general, Daniel Cameron, could have run for another term but decided to run for governor instead.

There are no contested races for attorney general in this spring’s primary election.

However, Republican Russell Coleman and Democrat Pamela Stevenson will compete against each other in November.

Coleman, a former U.S. attorney, got an early jump in the race when he announced his candidacy the morning after Cameron declared he would run for governor.

He touts proven experience with results.

Over the last 20 years, Coleman said he “has taken on violent crime at the highest levels of law enforcement” and describes himself as “a pro-life, pro-family conservative Republican who has the hard-won experience to keep Kentucky families safe.”

Pamela Stevenson

In 2017, President Donald Trump picked Coleman to be the U.S. attorney for the Western District of Kentucky, and the U.S. Senate unanimously confirmed him.

Before being confirmed as U.S. attorney, Coleman served as a volunteer assistant commonwealth’s attorney in Oldham County and as senior advisor and legal counsel to U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell.

Stevenson is a state legislator from Louisville, a Baptist minister and spent 27 years in the Air Force. She grew up with her life and community centered around the church founded by her grandfather: Oak Grove Missionary Baptist Church, in the heart of Louisville.

She says the values she learned there — “faith, family, and service” — called her into a career of service as a Judge Advocate General attorney in the U.S. Air Force and as the founder of a nonprofit providing free legal services to veterans.

She said she will be the “People’s Lawyer,” protecting Kentucky families from big business, corrupt politicians and scammers.

Agriculture commissioner

Richard Heath

The state agriculture commissioner promotes Kentucky farms.

Two Republicans and two Democrats are vying for the seat held for the last eight years by Republican Ryan Quarles, who is running for governor.

The Republican race features two men with legislative experience while the Democratic race highlights two political newcomers.

State Rep. Richard Heath of Mayfield is taking on former state Rep. Jonathan Shell of Lancaster in the GOP contest.

Jonathan Shell

Both Heath and Shell have been running TV ads of them on the farm.

Heath is chair of the House Agriculture Committee and owns Heath Building Material Inc. in Graves County.

Shell is a fifth-generation farmer at Shell Farms and Greenhouses in Garrard County. He is a former state House majority leader and worked with U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell’s latest campaign.

Sierra J. Enlow

The Democratic race features Sierra J. Enlow, who grew up on a family farm in LaRue County and today is an economic development consultant to communities and companies as they evaluate opportunities to grow and expand.

Mikael Malone

Enlow worked with economic development teams at both Louisville Forward and Greater Louisville Inc. to develop strategies focused on supporting tech-enable businesses.

Her Democratic rival, Mikael Malone, of Winchester, is a microbiologist.

Treasurer

The Kentucky treasurer is the state’s chief fiscal officer and takes care of revenue deposits and unclaimed property.

The current treasurer, Allison Ball, is running for state auditor.

Three Republicans and one Democrat have filed to replace her.

Andrew Cooperrider

In the Republican contest,? Andrew Cooperrider of Lexington emphasizes that his political efforts started “with coffee” and that he took “a stand against tyranny.”

He is referring to his decision not to comply with Gov. Andy Beshear’s mandate during the COVID-19 pandemic to close his coffee shop.

Mark Metcalf

“Our story was covered both locally and nationally, and then a movement was born,” said Cooperrider on his campaign website.

It’s not clear how far that movement has gone.

Cooperrider lost a bid for the Kentucky Senate and now has his aim set on the treasurer’s office.

He said he is running for state treasurer because “I am sick and

O.C. “OJ” Oleka

tired of corruption running rampant in our government. We need a constitutional watchdog to hold politicians like Beshear accountable.”

Cooperrider, like the other two Republicans in this contest, touts conservative values, though the office has little to do with issues like abortion and gun ownership.

Michael Bowman

Mark Metcalf has been elected Garrard County attorney six times and was counsel for 22 years to the Garrard County Fiscal Court. He pledges to be a watchdog as treasurer.

O.C. “OJ” Oleka, of Frankfort, is president of Oleka Management Consultant. He was a former deputy treasurer under Allison Ball and says he is the most qualified to start work as treasurer.

The Republican winner on Tuesday will face Democrat Michael Bowman of Louisville in November. He has served in various leadership positions in Louisville, including Parks Alliance and the Southwest Festival Committee.

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Craft’s GOP rivals have little to say about her absenteeism as U.S. ambassador to Canada https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/04/03/crafts-gop-rivals-have-little-to-say-about-her-absenteeism-as-u-s-ambassador-to-canada/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/04/03/crafts-gop-rivals-have-little-to-say-about-her-absenteeism-as-u-s-ambassador-to-canada/#respond Mon, 03 Apr 2023 09:30:40 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=4191

In December 2019, then-President Donald Trump and then-Ambassador Kelly Craft spoke to the media during a luncheon with representatives of the United Nations Security Council in the Cabinet Room at the White House. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

Kelly Craft’s four major rivals for governor in the May 16 Republican primary were mostly mum when asked about reports that she had a high absenteeism rate as U.S. ambassador to Canada.

In 2019, the Democratic staff of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee issued a critical minority report on Craft’s nomination by then-President Donald Trump to be ambassador to the United Nations.

Among its criticisms, the report said she spent the equivalent of seven months of her 20-month tenure as U.S. ambassador to Canada back in the United States where she had homes in Kentucky and Oklahoma.? The coal company of her husband, Joe Craft, has its headquarters in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The eight-page minority report said Craft was not qualified to be U.N. ambassador, citing “dereliction of duties” during her tenure as ambassador to Canada, including high absenteeism.

Several Republicans took issue with the Democrats’ tally of Craft’s absences, saying some of the days were for annual and sick leave. She eventually was confirmed to the U.N. post on a 56-34 Senate vote on July 31, 2019 and served until 2021.

The report said Craft made more than 43 trips to Kentucky or Oklahoma while ambassador, spending 210 days (34.5 percent of her time) in states where she and her spouse have homes.

Her absences prevented her from meeting with senior Canadian officials or lead the efforts of the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa, the minority report claimed, adding that this alone should disqualify her from serving as U.S. representative to the United Nations.

The report also said Craft said at her nomination hearing that she always requested and received approval for her travel.

But records showed that she spent at least 11 days out of Canada without State Department approval, including one three-day trip to Kentucky and repeated unapproved extensions of existing trips to Kentucky or Oklahoma.?

Politico was the first media outlet to report Craft’s on-the-job absences. They took on more national than state attention at the time because Craft, a political appointee with close ties to Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Louisville, did not have widespread diplomatic or political experience typical of a U.N. nominee.

Kelly Craft

During her confirmation hearing, Craft attributed much of her travel back to the United States to the demands of negotiating and promoting a revamped North American free trade pact. But Democrats found that only about 40 days of the 356 total days she spent partially or wholly outside of Canada were for trade negotiations. Moreover, the minority staff found that she had claimed 60 personal days away from the job.

In total, Craft spent part or all of 356 days outside of Canada during her time as ambassador there, which amounts to more than 56 percent of her time on the job, Democrats say. (Republicans say their count was 323 days.)

Under the headline, “Trump’s U.N. nominee was ‘absent’ ambassador,”?Politico reported in June 2019 that Federal Aviation ?Administration records “show that a private jet registered to Craft’s husband and used by the ambassador made 128 flights between the United States and Canada during a 15-month span of her tenure in Ottawa, the equivalent of a round trip once a week.

“Some of the trips correspond with dates of events Craft attended in her home state of Kentucky — such as the Kentucky Derby and a media interview at a University of Kentucky basketball facility named for her husband, Joe Craft, a coal billionaire — but neither of the Crafts, through their spokespeople, would confirm how many of the flights involved her travel,” Politico said.

The Democrats on the Senate committee also found that Joe Craft attended meetings with U.S. and Canadian government officials, along with Kelly Craft in her official capacity as ambassador.

Daniel Cameron

Committee Republicans said Joe Craft’s appearances at the events were in his role as her spouse.

Kelly Craft and her husband have donated millions of dollars to Republican political candidates across the country.

Only major contender not to have held elective office

Of the major Republican candidates who want to unseat Democratic incumbent Andy Beshear in the November general election, only Craft has not held elective office.

Craft was the first woman to hold the post as U.S. ambassador to Canada. Before that, she was appointed by President George W. Bush as a U.S. alternate delegate to the United Nations in 2007, where she focused on America’s engagement in Africa.

She heads a business advisory firm in Lexington. Born in Lexington, she grew up just outside Glasgow. Her late father, Dr. Bobby Guilfoil, a veterinarian, was active in the Democratic Party.

Ryan Quarles

The Kentucky Lantern asked Craft’s rivals in this spring’s GOP primary election if the 2019 Senate Democratic report about Craft should be an issue in this year’s race for governor.

Their response was limited, if any.

The campaign of Attorney General Daniel Cameron, whom Craft has accused of not being a conservative in some tough ads, did not respond. Cameron, so far, has said little about Craft.

The campaign of Agriculture Commissioner Ryan Quarles also did not respond.? Quarles is a former state legislator who is in his second term as state farm chief.

Alan Keck

Somerset Mayor Alan Keck, who was first elected to his current post in 2018 and recently won a second term, said, “Track records are important indicators of the future. I don’t know why then-Ambassador Craft was away from her post so often.?

“During her tenure in Canada, I was busy leading our family business, creating jobs and campaigning to help transform my hometown of Somerset.

“As a CEO, mayor and governor, it’s critical that you not only lead by?example but do so with transparency. Kentucky voters will never have to question my presence or my commitment.”?

Kentucky Auditor Mike Harmon
Mike Harmon

Mike Harmon, who is finishing his second term as state auditor and is a former state legislator, said, “My only comment would be that my campaign ‘Mike Harmon for Governor,’ will continue to focus on our main objective which is to make Andy Beshear a one-term governor.??

“I will continue to travel the state and promote our message of ‘Freedom Over Fear!’”?

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Kentucky lame-duck lawmakers flew to Hawaii on taxpayers’ tab https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/03/24/kentucky-lame-duck-lawmakers-flew-to-hawaii-on-taxpayers-tab/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/03/24/kentucky-lame-duck-lawmakers-flew-to-hawaii-on-taxpayers-tab/#respond Fri, 24 Mar 2023 21:20:18 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=3878

The Council of State Governments hosted a conference in December in Honolulu.

Seven lame-duck lawmakers were among 26 members of the Kentucky General Assembly who attended a conference last December in Hawaii.?The trip cost taxpayers more than $86,000.

The conference of the Council of State Governments in Honolulu, which attracted more than 1,000 state legislators from across the country, offered workshops on various governmental issues. It was held Dec. 7-10.

The expenses paid include $752.88 to each lawmaker except House Speaker David Osborne.?Osborne got paid $942.38 in salary because expense payments to the speaker and Senate president are enhanced.? He also claimed $40 for other expenses for tips to hotel staff.

“This simply amounts to lame spending for lame ducks,” said Jim Waters, president and chief executive officer for Bluegrass Institute for Public Policy Solutions. “It shows a lack of respect for taxpayers.”

Information about the expenses associated with the Hawaii conference was obtained from the Kentucky Legislative Research Commission through the Kentucky Open Records Law.? The commission did not respond to questions about LRC staffers who attended the conference and their expenses.

The total reimbursement payment to legislators for the conference according to the LRC? was $86,095.15.

The seven lame-duck Kentucky legislators on the trip were Rep. Jeffrey Donohue, D-Fairdale; Rep. Angie Hatton, D-Whitesburg, who was House minority whip; House Minority Leader Joni Jenkins, D-Louisville; Sen. Alice Forgy Kerr, R-Lexington; Rep. Ed Massey, R-Hebron, who was chair of the House Judiciary Committee; House Majority Whip Chad McCoy, R-Bardstown; and Rep. Patti Minter, D-Bowling Green.? Their expenses totaled $26,492.

Some of the seven lost re-election bids in the November general election and some had announced their retirements earlier.

Angela Billings, communications director for Senate Republicans, said state law provides that members of the General Assembly, like other state employees and public officials, are reimbursed for their travel expenditures when they are on official business.

She said, this includes approved travel to legislative conferences where the members participate in panel discussions, give policy speeches, or receive information on current issues.

Send Alice Forgy Kerr spoke during the 2019 legislative session. (Photo by LRC Public Information)

In the case of Kerr, said Billings, she was asked to serve on a civics panel, “Leading in a Polarized Environment,” with former Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear, the father of current Gov. Andy Beshear, during the conference.

“Therefore, Sen. Kerr’s travel was on official business while she was a sitting state senator and she was eligible to seek reimbursement of her expenses consistent with state law,” said Billings.

Kerr said in an interview that she was honored to be asked by the Council of State Governments to be a presenter at the Hawaii conference about polarization in American politics

“They asked me to do this in September and I agreed,” she said.? “There are indications they would like for me to do more on this subject.”

Regarding whether taxpayers should have to pay expenses for lame-duck legislators to attend out-of-state conferences, Kerr said, “I felt what I did was in my official position.”

Hatton, an attorney, said she got reservations early for the Hawaii trip and “was still very much on the job, still handling constituent calls when I went to it.”

She noted that programs at the conference included emergency management, which she was dealing with in line with summer flooding in Eastern Kentucky.

Angela Hatton

Hatton also said the Hawaii conference was the only one she applied for in 2022.

The other outgoing legislators could not be immediately reached for comment.

Waters, of? the nonprofit, nonpartisan, free-market think tank Bluegrass Institute that often praises legislative leaders, said he did not understand how Kentucky taxpayers are going to benefit by sending -------lame-duck legislators to Hawaii for a four-day conference.

“There is no benefit,” he said. “They may say they got something out of a meeting, but look how little time they have to use it.? Their requests should not have been approved.”

Senate President Robert Stivers, R-Manchester, and House Speaker David Osborne, R-Prospect, approve legislators’ requests to attend out-of-state conferences.

Stivers, in an email, said, “Not only do these conferences provide valuable networking opportunities for our legislators, but they also include exposure to best practices in legislation from other states that Kentucky may benefit from.”

He noted that Kentucky has hosted the Council of State Governments-South convention in Lexington in 2016, the Council of State Governments National convention in Covington in 2018, and the Senate President’s Forum in Lexington in 2022. The Council of State Governments has its headquarters in Lexington.

“In 2024, we will host the National Conference for State Legislators in Louisville, positively impacting the economy with 6,500 room nights and the additional spending across associated industries that generate powerful tourism in Kentucky.”

Speaker Osborne did not respond to? a request seeking an explanation of his approval for the lame-duck legislators.

At least four legislators from the Kentucky delegation listed expenses only for registration and salary, indicating their expenses for airfare, lodging and travel had not yet been processed. Sen. Brandon Smith, R-Hazard, paid his own $550 registration.

The cost for airfare for the Kentucky legislators ranged from $622 to $1,333.69.? LRC said that was because of factors like date of bookings and location of travel.

Information from the LRC listed the names of 26 members whose expenses were paid for the conference in Hawaii.

They included Republicans and Democrats and several House and Senate leaders.? One name was listed as Charles Wilson, who actually is state Sen. Mike Wilson, R-Bowling Green. He listed no expenses for airfare.? That is because legislators can be reimbursed for only one major out-of-state conference a year.

At out-of-state conferences, Kentucky legislators are paid $10 for breakfast, $15 for lunch and $25 for dinner

Waters also questioned why Kentucky lawmakers in Hawaii also were paid a salary.

“This shows disrespect to taxpayers and makes one wonder whether legislative leaders lack situational awareness, whether they are politically tone deaf.”

Waters noted that Kentucky voters last November rejected a proposed constitutional amendment that would allow state lawmakers to meet more often in Frankfort.

“If voters didn’t like that, what makes them think voters would like to pay their salaries for conferences out of state?” Waters asked. “It shows why the voters are cautious about giving

LRC Member Expenses CSG 2022 ]]>
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Northern Kentucky University sets up search for new president amidst gloomy financial picture https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/03/16/northern-kentucky-university-sets-up-search-for-new-president-amidst-gloomy-financial-picture/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/03/16/northern-kentucky-university-sets-up-search-for-new-president-amidst-gloomy-financial-picture/#respond Thu, 16 Mar 2023 16:07:06 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=3623

Northern Kentucky University will no longer have a diversity office, its president has announced. (Photo from Northern Kentucky Tribune)

The Northern Kentucky University Board of Regents took several big steps Wednesday to select a new president after its budget officials outlined financial woes that may lead to higher tuition and student services fees.

Kara Williams

The board hired at an undisclosed amount a firm to conduct a national search for a new president and appointed a presidential search leadership team and a committee, as well as launched a website to keep the public informed about the search.?It is www.nku.edu/presidential-search.html

Kara Williams, chair of the presidential search committee and secretary of the NKU Board of Regents, told the Northern Kentucky Tribune in an interview that there is no timeline to find a new president to replace Ashish Vaidya, who abruptly departed late last year as it was reported that the university is facing a budget shortfall of more than $18 million.

Asked what effect NKU’s finances will have on trying to attract the seventh NKU permanent president, Williams said the talent market is tight but the search committee plans to be aggressive and emphasize the opportunities of NKU.

Presidential search committee: Marquita Barron, NKU Director of Training & Development; Dr. Janel Bloch, NKU Professor, English; Dr. Hassan HassabElnaby, NKU Dean, Haile College of Business; Ashley Himes, NKU Regent, Student Services Coordinator at Regional School Programs; Candace McGraw, Chief Executive Officer, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport; Julia Pohl, Sports Business & Event Management Major, NKU Student; ?JT Roberts, Owner of DDX Transport; ?Nathan Smith, NKU Vice Chair BOR, Chief Investment Officer at Flagship Communities LC; Elizabeth Thompson, NKU Search Vice Chair and Regent, Member at Stites & Harbison LLC; Tom Wiedemann, NKU Foundation President, President and CEO of AAA Club Alliance; Kara Williams, NKU Search Chair and Secretary of BOR, Owner of The Marketing Collective; and Brad Zapp, NKU Regent, Managing Director of Connetic Ventures. (Asterisk denotes NKU alumni.)

Presidential search advisory board: Rensha Allen, NKU Black Alumni Council President, Allstate Agency; ?Brandon Billiter, NKU Director of Student Account Services; Mike Borchers, Local Superintendents Advisory Council, Superintendent Ludlow City Schools; Dr. David Childs, NKU Associate Professor, College of Education; Brent Cooper, President, NKY Chamber of Commerce; ?Dr. Charlisa Daniels, NKU Associate Professor, Chemistry & Biochemistry; Dr. Jacqueline Emerine, NKU Associate Professor, Communication; Dr. John Farrar, NKU Faculty Senate President, Associate Professor, Chemistry & Biochemistry; Dr. Fernando Figueroa, President, Gateway Community & Technical College; Lauren Goodwin, NKU Chase College of Law, Student; ?Staci Green, NKU Director of IT Support Services, President of SAFE; ?Karen Mefford, NKU Interim Comptroller; Darryl Peal, NKU Chief Diversity Officer; Steve Pendery, Campbell County Judge-Executive; ?Dr. Sandra Spataro, NKU Professor of Management, College of Business; Jennifer Sheffel, NKU Alumni Council President, President and CEO at Summit ActionCOACH; and Steve Slone, NKU Staff Congress President, Manager of Mail and Copy Services.

She said she had not thought about what effect, if any, this year’s gubernatorial election in Kentucky might have on attracting a new president. Kentucky governors usually like to have a say in who are appointed as presidents of state universities.

WittKieffer, the global executive search and leadership advisory firm based in Oak Brook, Ill., will conduct the national search of interested candidates, said Williams.? She said she did not know how much the university is paying the search firm.

Williams added that she hopes people will take the survey on the presidential website to express their views and participate in the various public forums the search will hold. Open forums to gauge public comments will be held March 28 and 29.

The NKU board charged the leadership of the search panel to provide it with information that will assist the board in selecting the university’s next president.

They included:

? Conduct a national search to generate a strong pool of candidates for the presidency of NKU.

? Use virtual and in-person forums to solicit from various constituent groups their perspectives about the leadership needs of NKU.

? Reduce the pool of applicants to a reasonable number of semi-finalists, probably five or less.

? Gather additional information about each semi-finalist (such as interview, data, reference checks).

? Host local visits for finalists (if desired by the candidates).

? Ensure that all semi-finalists and finalists receive accurate and thorough information about NKU.

? Work closely with the search firm and advisory groups to assist NKU’s presidential search.

? Carry out all responsibilities in the best interests of the university, regardless of the constituent group with which one most strongly identifies.

Members on the search committee and presidential board include faculty, staff, students, regents, and community partners.

“Each member of the presidential search leadership team brings with them a unique perspective and diverse viewpoint, which will prove valuable for NKU and its next leader,” said Williams. “The team is honored to serve in this capacity for NKU and is looking forward to beginning the next stage of the search process – conducting listening sessions and forums in order to build out the presidential profile.”

“The internal and external stakeholders’ commitment to providing perspectives will be vital to our process and each person’s collective passion for the university.”
Rich Boehne, chair of the NKU Board of Regents, said, “I am confident that the search leadership team will oversee a process that brings forth the strongest candidates excited to lead this university. I know that the team will do so with the highest degree of care and responsibility, consistent with shared governance, and the best traditions of this institution.”

Financial belt tightening expected

Before the NKU board took up matters of the presidential search committee, its budget officials said the institution’s budget has been adjusted by $39.9 million this fiscal year.

They said that amounted to about 15 percent of the budget and was unprecedented.

They also spoke of losses over the last five years in revenue from parking, food and beverage services, and the Truist Arena.

Increased rates for such services, as well as tuition, are likely when the board approves its next budget in June.

Bonita Brown, who was NKU’s vice president and chief strategy officer, has been interim president since January.? At a meeting earlier this year, the board decided that whoever is selected interim president of the university cannot be in the running to become its president.

NKU is a state university of more than 16,000 students and 2,000 faculty and staff between Highland Heights in Kentucky and downtown Cincinnati.

This article is published with permission of the Northern Kentucky Tribune, a nonprofit publication of the Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism.

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Bill moves to let Kentucky Horse Park hire outside merit system, share in local ‘bedroom’ tax https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/03/03/bill-moves-to-let-kentucky-horse-park-hire-outside-merit-system-share-in-local-bedroom-tax/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/03/03/bill-moves-to-let-kentucky-horse-park-hire-outside-merit-system-share-in-local-bedroom-tax/#respond Fri, 03 Mar 2023 17:08:10 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=3176

Entrance sign to the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington. (Photo by Getty Images)

A state legislative panel unanimously approved a bill Thursday that would allow the Kentucky Horse Park to exclude its new hires from the state merit system designed to protect employees from political influence and enable the park to share in the “bedroom tax” collected by hotels, motels and other providers of overnight lodging in Fayette and Scott counties.

With no debate, the House Tourism and Outdoor Recreation Committee approved House Bill 39 on a 14-0 vote and sent it to the full House for its consideration.? The House may vote on it Tuesday.

The sponsor of the bill, Rep. Phil Pratt, R-Georgetown, told the panel its purpose is to make the 1,200-acre park in northern Fayette County off KY 1973 (Iron Works Pike) and Interstate 75 more competitive with other horse arenas in the country.

Alston Kerr, chair of the Kentucky Horse Park Commission, said the attempt is to make the park “100 percent more efficient.”

Lee Carter, the park’s director, said he was “very pleased” with the committee’s action on HB 39.

He noted that the committee voted on a substitute of the original bill.

Changes in the substitute, he said, included membership on the park commission.

Membership of the Kentucky Horse Park commission would increase under the proposed legislation. The commission now has 13 members appointed by the governor along with the secretaries of the tourism and economic development cabinets.

Under the legislation, the number of appointments by the governor would drop to 12 and the finance secretary would replace the economic development secretary.

Also added to the commission would be the state agriculture commissioner and the dean of the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture. The committee substitute replaced the tourism directors from Lexington and Georgetown with the mayors and county judge-executives.

The bill also would require the park to report to the House panel every year by Nov. 1 and remove language dealing with revenue bonds and the state code to procure various equipment.

The most controversial provision in the bill — excluding new hires from the merit system — would not affect the 55 to 60 merit employees at the park.? They would stay in the merit system but new hires would not.

Dave Smith, head of the Kentucky Association of State Employees, said after the committee meeting that without the merit system new hires at the park could be fired any time for any reason.

“We will keep on fighting this. It’s not a done deal yet,” said Smith.

The merit system emphasizes making personnel decisions (hiring, promoting, assigning work and other matters) based on an individual’s qualifications and performance. It also protects state employees against arbitrary actions and discriminatory practices. Politics is not to be involved.

Political appointees, like cabinet secretaries and other managers, are non-merit.? They generally serve at the pleasure of the governor.

Carter, the Horse Park’s director, said excluding new employees from the merit system would provide “more flexibility” in staffing.

The bill also would enable the Horse Park to share in proceeds from the transient or “bedroom” tax collected in Fayette and Scott counties.

Fayette County has a 9.5% transient or bedroom tax. Of that, 1% goes to the state for tourism efforts, 4% goes to VisitLex and the rest to retire debt.

For every percentage point, the tax generates about $2 million.? That means VisitLex gets about $8 million a year from the tax to promote tourism efforts.

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‘Moms for Liberty’ gets three books removed from Campbell County school libraries https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/02/16/moms-for-liberty-gets-three-books-removed-from-campbell-county-school-libraries/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/02/16/moms-for-liberty-gets-three-books-removed-from-campbell-county-school-libraries/#respond Thu, 16 Feb 2023 10:45:45 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=2624

Campbell County’s public schools have removed three books from their libraries at the urging of Moms for Liberty, a group that says it is “dedicated to the survival of America” by defending parental rights.

But PEN America, a national organization founded in 1923 that defends and celebrates free expression, says the efforts by Moms for Liberty amount to book banning and can be dangerous.

Mirna Eads

Mirna Eads, a nurse who unsuccessfully ran for the state House as a Republican last year, is chair of the Campbell County chapter of Moms for Liberty.

It is part of a conservative nonprofit organization that was formed in Florida in 2021 that claims to advocate for parental rights in schools.?Some of its chapters have campaigned against COVID-19 restrictions in schools and against school curriculums that mention LGBTQ rights, race, critical race theory and discrimination.

Eads said the Campbell chapter is non-partisan but some chapters across the nation have close ties to the Republican Party. Two other Kentucky counties – Jefferson and Boone – have chapters.

The Boone County chapter had its initial meeting Jan. 26, and about 50 people showed up.?Karen Strayer is its chair.?She ran unsuccessfully for a seat on the Boone County Board of Education in 2022.

Karen Strayer

The Campbell County chapter, formed last August,?has persuaded Campbell County’s high and middle schools to “remove from the shelves” three books and the schools are reviewing 17 others the group finds objectionable, said Eads.

“We don’t ban books. We challenge them,” said Eads.

Eads said most of these books have explicit sexual content and meet the guidelines of state law’s definition of pornography.?That definition includes acts of masturbation, homosexuality, lesbianism, bestiality, sexual intercourse, or deviant sexual intercourse, or physical contact with the genitals, flagellation, or excretion for the purpose of sexual stimulation or gratification.

The three books that have been removed from Campbell County schools, said Eads, are “Lucky” by Alice Seabold,?a memoir about being raped as an 18-year-old college freshman at Syracuse University; “Tricks” by Ellen Hopkins, about five teenagers who fall into prostitution; and “Out of Darkness” by Ashley Hope Perez, about a 1937 school explosion in Texas that includes child sexual abuse. The school district confirmed that the books had been removed.

“Out of Darkness” won the Michael L. Printz Award that annually honors the best book written for teens, based entirely on its literary merit.

Also challenging ‘The Kite Runner’

Moms for Liberty has appealed the school system’s decision to retain “The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini, about a boy growing up in Afghanistan.?It won critical praise and was on the New York Times best sellers list and was a major motion picture.

Eads said some schools are “getting around” the state definition of pornography because they contend the books are for educational purposes.?“I don’t see how learning to give oral or anal sex, masturbate, fisting, or reading about the violent rape of a child in detail is educational,” she said.

“This is definitely not appropriate for school-age children.”

Eads said? a parent with her group checked with other schools and found that Fort Thomas Independent stated that it has none of the questioned books in its libraries and Newport Independent schools had not responded.

Eads said Simon Kenton High School obtained a list of the questioned?books and now requires parental consent before students can check them out.

Eads bristles when the group’s efforts are branded book banning.

“We are only trying to make books available in school libraries that are appropriate to the children’s ages,” she said.?“Some of these are worst than ‘Fifty Shades of Grey.’”

How Campbell County schools deal with objections to books

Any time a resident of the Campbell County school district challenges a book or text in a school, the system follows a board policy, said Connie Pohlgeers, director of school improvements.

The policy involves an established review committee that works alongside the superintendent to review the materials that have been challenged.

Forms to challenge any materials in the school are available to any resident of the district at the principal’s office.

The request shall include a statement of reason for objection and a statement of desired action regarding the material.

The review committee, established by the superintendent, is made up of the principal, professional librarian(s), two staff members designated by the principal and whose subject area is affected and two parents.

All committee members shall represent the school receiving the complaint.

The committee makes a decision and the principal must inform the complainant in writing within 10 days of the decision. The complainant can appeal to the superintendent. The superintendent has to make a decision within 10 days. That decision can be appealed to the board.

The board will consider the appeal at the next scheduled meeting and notify the complainant of its final decision regarding the challenged material.

“We pride ourselves in working with families regarding any questions or concerns they may have,” said Superintendent Shelli Wilson.

Concerns of PEN America?

Kasey Meehan

Kasey Meehan, director of PEN America’s Freedom to Read project based in New York, said Moms for Liberty “certainly have the right to challenge school books.

“But they are super-organized and are going after books across the nation, especially those with LGBTQ characters and racism.

“It feels less like concern over age-appropriateness and more like control.”

She said Moms for Liberty chapters across the nation have banned classics like George Orwell’s “1984” and Margaret Atwood’s “The Handmaid’s Tales.”

And even one chapter objected to a children’s Bible, “because of adult stories in it.”

About 40 percent of the books Moms for Liberty object to nationwide involve LGBTQ characters, said Meehan. Eads said that is not true in Campbell County.

Meehan also said PEN America is seeing some state legislatures ban books in school.

Sen. Jason Howell, R-Murray, has introduced Senate Bill 5 in this year’s Kentucky General Assembly that would?require local boards of education to adopt a complaint resolution policy to address parent complaints about materials that are harmful to minors.

It also would require the Kentucky Department of Education to come up with “model complaint” resolution policy.

PEN America recently released a report that found 2,532 instances of books being banned from July 2021 to June 2022. Book banning occurred in 138 school districts in 32 states. Texas reported the highest number with more than 751 books. The report listed the Moms for Liberty group as one of three leaders in banning books in the United States.

The group’s national website, www.momsforliberty.org/about/, includes a page that shows a smiling child with an American flag and the inscription, “Children should be educated and instructed in the principles of freedom,” a quote by Founding Father John Adams.

This article is republished from the?Northern Kentucky Tribune, a nonprofit publication of the Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism.

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Kentucky legislators get pay hike after voting increase for themselves but not for teachers https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/01/19/kentucky-legislators-get-pay-hike-after-voting-increase-for-themselves-but-not-for-teachers/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2023/01/19/kentucky-legislators-get-pay-hike-after-voting-increase-for-themselves-but-not-for-teachers/#respond Thu, 19 Jan 2023 10:50:35 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=1411

Members of the legislature's Budget Conference Committee met in the Capitol Annex on March 17, 2022. (LRC photos)

Most state lawmakers will be getting an 8% pay raise in 2023 and a boost in other expenses. They voted for the pay hike last year for themselves and most state workers but not for teachers.

That does not go over well with the Kentucky Education Association and KY 120 United, an advocacy group for public education that is partnering with the American Federation of Teachers, a national teachers’ union.

The two groups favor mandated across-the board raises for school employees, claiming it prevents inequity in pay across the state.

The Republican-led legislature last year declined Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear’s call for a 5 percent across-the-board raise for teachers.

It instead decided to increase state money to school districts from $4,000 a student to $4,100 a student in the first year of the two-year budget and $4,200 in the second year and let each school district decide whether to boost teachers’ pay.

Some, like the Kentucky School Boards Association, argue that it is better for the legislature to provide more money to school districts and then let school boards determine how much pay raise, if any, teachers should get.

Teacher pay survey

The Kentucky School Boards Association last year surveyed school districts about teacher raises. It asked: “Did your school board approve an across-the-board employee raise for the 2022-23 school year (that was separate and in addition to step increases; and no matter if it was called a cost of living/COLA increase; raise; etc.)? Step increases are built into a district’s budget to reflect education level and experience.

The survey showed 95 percent of the 171 school districts answered, “Yes.”

About 37 percent gave all employees the same percent raise as the preceding year, while about 58 percent adopted more complex compensation packages such as additional raises for targeted employees, alternating increases for certified (staff that must have a certificate to work like teachers, counselors, librarians and principals) and classified (staff that does not need certification like cooks, janitors and bus drivers) or increases determined by years of service.

But the survey showed nine school districts said no to pay raises – Breathitt County, Clinton County, Dawson Springs Independent, Edmonson County, Eminence Independent, Fulton County, Glasgow Independent, Jackson Independent and Lee County.

The survey showed only 24 of the state’s 171 school districts provided at least 5% pay raises for this school year – what Beshear sought.

Beshear again seeks teacher raises

During his State of the Commonwealth Address, Beshear again asked this year’s state law-making session to provide a 5% raise for public educators.

The governor said the raise was needed to address the 11,000 teacher vacancies across the state.

But Senate President Robert Stivers, R-Manchester, told KET after the governor’s speech that it is not time “to do one-off budget things” when the legislature next year is expected to make huge contributions to state pensions. He added that Beshear has not called legislative leaders about a pay raise for teachers.

House Speaker David Osborne, R-Prospect, told KET that the issue of teachers’ pay should be local decisions.

The average teacher salary in Kentucky is $54,139, while the national average is $66,397.

Nema Brewer, a Kentucky AFT organizer and a retired community relations specialist in the Fayette County Public Schools system, said this week? that she does not begrudge pay raises for state workers.

“But I have a problem with a hefty 8% pay raise and allowances and other expenses when you are working a part-time job and making more money than a first-year teacher,” she said.

Details of legislators’ pay hike

According to the Legislative Research Commission, the pay for most Kentucky legislators will jump this new year from $188.22 a day to $203.28 a

The raise will apply only to legislators who began a new term on Jan. 1. That includes all 100 House members and the 19 of the 39 Senate members who won elections last November.

Any legislator who is not beginning a new term this year will be compensated under the old pay rates. This rule, however, does not apply to expenses.

Legislators who chair committees and are in leadership will get more this year in addition to their salaries.? Those changes are $20.21 instead of the old rate of $18.71 for each committee meeting chaired, a total of $243.67 a day instead of $225.62 a day for floor leaders, $254.42 a day instead of $235.57 for the Senate president and House speaker, and 234.23 a day instead of $216.88 a day for other leaders.

All legislators will see their paid expenses jump this year from $170.50 a day to $172.70.

The legislation last year that provided the pay changes — House Bill 243 — dropped the so-called “stationery allowance” for legislators to provide written correspondence with constituents. The “stationery allowance’ was $250 for House members and $500 for Senate members.

But lawmakers replaced that with an “allowance” now at the rate of $350 for House members and $650 for Senate members. The allowance is designed to help them communicate with constituents. That is a 30 percent increase for senators and 40 percent for representatives.

Another paid expense for legislators is mileage.

They are paid the federal reimbursement rate for each mile they drive from home to reach the Capitol, limited to one round-trip per week. That rate is now 65.5 cents up a mile, up from 57.5 cents in last year’s legislative session.

The overall price tag for this year’s legislative session is estimated to be $4.256 million, with most of that taken up in salaries.

The first four days of the session, traditionally for organizational purposes, ended Jan. 6. The 2023 regular session starts up again Feb. 7 and runs though March 30.

Lawmakers receive no salary between the two parts of the session. During the second session, lawmakers will get paid for every day from Feb. 7 to March 30, including weekends and holidays.

That amounts to 56 pay days for lawmakers in the 2023 session, for which a?rank-and-file legislator can expect to receive $21,055 ?in salary and expenses.

Kentucky’s lawmakers are not overpaid compared with those in other states, although direct comparisons are difficult because of ?significant variance among the 50 states, according to a survey last year by the National Conference of State Legislatures.

The average pay for a state legislator in the United States is about $37,000 a year. California legislators, who meet year-round, are the highest paid at $114,877 a year.

All of the top five highest-paid legislatures are full-time. Kentucky legislators are scheduled to meet for 30 days in odd-numbered years and for 60 days in even-numbered years.

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Biden visiting Covington Wednesday to talk infrastructure, jobs in wake of toll-free funding plan for I-75 bridge https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/briefs/biden-visiting-covington-wednesday-to-talk-infrastructure-jobs-in-wake-of-toll-free-funding-plan-for-i-75-bridge/ Mon, 02 Jan 2023 17:23:18 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?post_type=briefs&p=1156

Brent Spence Bridge spans the Ohio between Northern Kentucky and Cincinnati. (Ohio Department of Transportation photo)

This article is republished from the Northern Kentucky Tribune.

President Joe Biden is to visit Covington Wednesday to tout how his economic plan is rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure, using the Brent Spence Bridge Corridor Project as a major example.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, U.S. Senate Republican Mitch McConnell of Louisville and Democratic U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio announced last week that the project between Covington and Cincinnati has been awarded federal funding grants worth more than $1.6 billion.

The money gives the landmark bridge and corridor project the green light to move toward construction without tolls.

The White House issued a release Sunday of Biden’s visit to Covington.?It is believed he will be the first president to make Covington a destination stop since President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

The release said Biden “will deliver remarks on how his economic plan is rebuilding our infrastructure, creating good paying jobs that don’t require a four-year degree and revitalizing communities left behind.”

Biden’s visit will be open to the media and additional details of it are to follow.

It is expected the two governors, McConnell and other political leaders will be in attendance.?Beshear is to deliver his State of the Commonwealth address Wednesday night on the second day of this year’s state legislative session.

Dan Hassert, spokesman for Covington Mayor Joe Meyer, said Sunday night, “This is a big deal for Covington.”

He said the mayor has been working with the president’s office in recent days to make the visit possible.

“We certainly appreciate the president’s leadership to make this happen and all the work of Gov. Beshear.”

Beshear promised during his 2019 campaign for governor that he would try to raise funds for the project without tolls. The project involves building a companion bridge west of the Brent Spence, which was built in the 1960s to carry about 80,000 vehicles a day.? It has doubled that number in recent years since I-75 has become a key freight corridor stretching from Canada to Florida.

There also will be improvements to the current bridge.

Groundbreaking for the project is anticipated in late 2023.?Substantial completion is slated for 2029.

Besides the federal dollars, the Kentucky General Assembly secured $250 million in the state’s two-year road plan that helped the state’s application for the federal funding.

While Northern Kentucky officials have been clamoring for the project without tolls, officials in Louisville?have expressed frustration with tolls on the Kennedy, Lincoln and Lewis and Clark bridges between Louisville and southern Indiana.

Tolls were placed on those bridges because federal infrastructure money was not available when they were built. Area officials have been pushing for more federal dollars to ease the costs of the tolls.

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Kentucky Horse Park seeking to exclude new hires from merit system, share in local ‘bedroom’ tax https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2022/12/05/kentucky-horse-park-seeking-to-exclude-new-hires-from-merit-system-share-in-local-bedroom-tax/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2022/12/05/kentucky-horse-park-seeking-to-exclude-new-hires-from-merit-system-share-in-local-bedroom-tax/#respond Mon, 05 Dec 2022 10:50:40 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=526

Entrance sign to the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington. (Photo by Getty Images)

The Kentucky Horse Park wants state lawmakers to approve legislation that would exclude its new hires from the state merit system designed to protect employees from political influence.

It also is seeking enabling legislation to allow the park to tap into the transient or “bedroom” tax collected by hotels, motels and other providers of overnight lodging in Fayette and Scott counties.

Kentucky Horse Park
The 1,200-acre park in northern Fayette County can be viewed from Interstate 75. The entrance is on KY 1973 (Iron Works Pike).

The moves are several being mulled in hopes of making the 1,200-acre park in northern Fayette County off KY 1973 (Iron Works Pike) and Interstate 75 more self-sustaining and competitive with other horse arenas in the country, said the park’s executive director Lee Carter.

Other moves the park is seeking include increasing the number of members on the park commission and streamlining purchase procedures for the working horse farm and educational theme park that opened in 1978.

State Rep. Phil Pratt, R-Georgetown, said he will file the legislation on the first day of the Kentucky General Assembly on Jan. 3.

Senate Majority Leader Damon Thayer, R-Georgetown, who called the legislation “a work in progress,” said he thinks it will be dealt with in the early part of next year’s 30-day session, which is to end March 30.

Thayer said he is for any legislation that can make the park more competitive and financially viable.

Merit System change

The most controversial part of the Horse Park legislation is expected to be the merit system, said Pratt.

Carter said the legislation would not affect the 55 to 60 merit employees currently at the park.

“They would stay in the merit system but new hires would not,” he said.

Rep. Phil Pratt, R-Georgetown.

Most state workers in the executive branch of state government are merit employees under Kentucky Revised Statute 18A. They often are referred to as “18A employees.”

The merit system emphasizes making personnel decisions (hiring, promoting, assigning work and other matters) based on an individual’s qualifications and performance.? It also protects state employees against arbitrary actions and discriminatory practices. Politics is not to be involved.

Political appointees, like cabinet secretaries and other managers, are non-merit.? They generally serve at the pleasure of the governor.

According to the state Personnel Cabinet, there are 28,719 full-time executive branch employees.? Of them, 22,359 are “18A” merit employees.?

A total of 1,881 state employees are classified as “non-chapter.” They are state employees not in political positions but are not under the merit system. Most of them work for the Kentucky State Fair board and various boards and commissions.

Non-chapter state employees receive state benefits like health insurance but have no right to appeal any personnel action to the state Personnel Board.

Carter said excluding new employees from the merit system would give the Horse Park “more flexibility” in staffing.

“The merit system is a wonderful system but it can be a slow process of bringing in people and hiring,” he said. “Last year we lost 10 employees and needed to replace most of them quickly. We have 30 miles of fences and much mowing and trimming to keep up with.

“Being non-merit will allow us to act more quickly in staffing,” he said. “We believe we have a lot of similarities with the Fair Board and would like to operate similarly.”

Lee Carte

David Smith, executive director of the Kentucky Association of State Employees, opposes the idea of not placing new Horse Park hires in the merit system.

“I think it’s a bunch of nonsense,” he said. “They would not be afforded the rights under the merit system and likely would be more subject to political patronage.”

?Smith said the practice of making more state workers “non-chapter” has been increasing.

“It already is hard enough to find people to work for the state,” he said.? “This practice will only make it that much harder.? It should be stopped. It’s just another way of removing the rights of employees.”

?Bedroom tax?

Many of the more than 600,000 people who visit the Horse Park each year as tourists or competitors stay in hotels, motels and other overnight lodging in Fayette and Scott counties, said Carter.

“We are busy 50 weeks out of the year. The bedroom tax would be a revenue stream for us of about $1 million annually,” he said.

“The extra money could help the park lower its fees to visit or compete at the park, help improve 40 years of deferred maintenance and maybe ask the General Assembly for less of a state appropriation.

“I would love to have a bedroom tax earmarked for the Horse Park.”

The legislature could not dictate on its own that Fayette’s and Scott’s bedroom tax receipts go to the Hhorse Park, said Carter.?

Mary Quinn Ramer
Mary Quinn Ramer

“Those taxes are set by the local tourism bureaus. They would have to determine if any money goes to the horse park. Those local tourism agencies would have to approve it and then it would go to their councils.”

Mary Quinn Ramer, president of VisitLex and a member of the Horse Park commission, stressed that what the Horse Park is seeking now is only enabling legislation from the state.

“Many decisions would have to be made before this would become a reality,” she said.

Fayette County has a 9.5% transient or bedroom tax. Of that, 1% goes to the state for tourism efforts, 4% goes to VisitLex and the rest to retire debt.

For every percentage point, the tax generates about $2 million, said Ramer.? That means VisitLex gets about $8 million a year from the tax to promote tourism efforts.

“We would have to get input from the hotels and motels before supporting the Horse Park,” Ramer said.

Carter noted that the bedroom tax in Lexington is supporting the Central Bank Center, a multi-purpose event and convention facility in downtown Lexington that includes Rupp Arena.

“We just think the Horse Park should get some help, too,” he said.

Asked if the goal is to make the Horse Park a private enterprise, Carter said, “That idea has been around for years. I don’t know if that makes sense.? I’m much more inclined to make ourselves more efficient.”

Other possible changes

Membership of the Kentucky Horse Park commission would increase under the proposed legislation.

The commission now has 13 members appointed by the governor along with the secretaries of the tourism and economic development cabinets.

Under the legislation now being considered, the number of appointments by the governor would drop to 12 and the finance secretary would replace the economic development secretary.?

Also added to the commission would be the state agriculture commissioner, the dean of the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture and the tourism directors from Lexington and Georgetown.

“These changes in the commission could provide better long-term strategic plans,’ said Carter.

Another change being sought by the Horse Park deals with state regulations on purchasing and getting rid of old equipment.

Under the legislation, the park would remain under the state Tourism Cabinet.??

Considered earlier for the legislation was a provision to give the Hhorse Ppark eminent domain authority to take nearby private property for its use, following the payment of just compensation.?

“We modeled the language in our legislation after that of the state Fair Board,” said Carter.? “Eminent domain was initially in but we soon deleted it. We have no eminent domain issues here at the park. We are surrounded by folks of whom we would have no desire to move into their space.”

Clayton Fredericks atop Ben Along Time competed during the Cross Country Phase of the 2007 Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event at the Kentucky Horse Park. (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)

Reason for the changes

Up until late 2010, the Kentucky Horse Park was the biggest, most well-known venue and horse leader for equine events in the United States, said Carter.

Since then, five or six major horse facilities have come on line that are privately funded,” he said. “They are potential competition. All those facilities will want to host the? events we have.”

The Horse Park’s annual operating budget is $13.9 million. About $2.2 million of that comes from the state’s General Fund, which pays for most state programs. The rest is generated by the park.

“Our goal is to be able to manage ourselves and to compete against the private industry. It is how we maintain what we treasure,” said Carter, who came on board in January as the park’s executive director.

Carter, of Georgetown, had been executive director of Equestrian Events, Inc., the organizing body for the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event, since 2012, that attracts more than 80,000 guests to the park.??

He said the park’s commission is “fully aware” of the legislation.

At a Nov. 17 meeting of the House Economic Development and Workforce Investment Commission, Alston Kerr, the horse park’s commission chair, appeared with Rep. Pratt and Carter to discuss the legislation.

She said, “State requirements make it very hard to operate a facility as diverse as we are and to be competitive in the private market.?

“We need a level playing field to be competitive.”

 

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Stivers says Senate GOP will decide soon whether to change abortion ban https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2022/12/01/stivers-says-senate-gop-will-decide-soon-whether-to-change-abortion-ban/ https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/2022/12/01/stivers-says-senate-gop-will-decide-soon-whether-to-change-abortion-ban/#respond Thu, 01 Dec 2022 17:33:04 +0000 https://www.criminaljusticepartners.com/?p=486

Robert Stivers, Kentucky Senate president
Kentucky Senate President Robert Stivers

This article is published with permission from the Northern?Kentucky?Tribune, a nonprofit publication of the Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism.

“It’s hard to tell” if Kentucky voters’ decision last month against a constitutional amendment to eliminate abortion rights from the state Constitution means the people want abortion allowed in cases involving rape and incest, the head of the Kentucky Senate said Wednesday.

Kentucky Senate President Robert Stivers was asked about implications of the controversial amendment’s defeat at a news conference at the Hotel Covington with other Senate GOP leaders and members in conjunction with their retreat before the 2023 General Assembly begins in January.

Stivers, R-Manchester, said his majority caucus will discuss the issue.

“This is something we have not gotten together as a caucus (to discuss) since the elections,” Stivers said in response to a question about possible abortion legislation in the upcoming legislative session..

Stivers said the 31 members of the caucus “have our personal opinions” on the issue and emphasized that the decision on whether to deal with abortion legislation in 2023 will be made by the caucus.

“It’s a little premature to ask us, but here in a few days, we’ll let you know,” he said.

Asked specifically if lawmakers will allow abortions in cases like rape and incest, Stivers said, “It’s hard to tell if the voters wanted exceptions.” He went on to say that question was not on the ballot.

The question on the Nov. 8 ballot asked if voters wanted to say there is no right to an abortion under the state Constitution.

Due to a so-called trigger law, Kentucky banned abortion immediately after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, a decision that ended the federal right to an abortion. The trigger law provided exceptions for life-threatening health risks to the mother but not for rape or incest.

The EMW Women’s Surgical Center in Louisville and Planned Parenthood, which performed abortions before they were prohibited, challenged the trigger law in court

The Kentucky Supreme Court now is pondering whether to reinstate an earlier injunction against the trigger law and a law banning abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy. An injunction, which would allow the resumption of abortions in Kentucky, would be in effect until the state courts reach a final decision on the constitutionality of the laws.

The state’s highest court held a hearing Nov.15 on the injunction issue and a decision is expected any time.

On another subject Wednesday, Stivers said the 2023 legislature will take a look at how constitutional amendments are presented to the voters.

He noted that the Supreme Court has said the entire amendment has to be published on the ballot.

“We are going to have to go back and re-evaluate the whole process,” he said. Constitutional Amendment 1, which also was defeated in November, contained more than 700 words on the ballot.? It would have given the legislature authority to call itself into session, a power now only the governor holds.

Senate budget chairman Chris McDaniel of Ryland Heights said it is sad that Northern Kentucky University is having financial problems. The university has reported a deficit of more than $24 million.

“We’re going to keep an eye on what they have going over there,” he said, adding that the university has not asked for more money from the legislature.

Joining Senate GOP leadership at Wednesday’s news conference were two newly elected members to the Senate – Shelley Funke Frommeyer in the 24th District and Gex Williams in the 20th District.

The caucus met earlier Wednesday with Covington Mayor Joe Meyer, CTI chief executive officer Tim Schroeder, Erlanger Mayor Jessica Fette and representatives from Blue North, which supports entrepreneurs throughout Northern Kentucky by hosting and sponsoring a variety of programs.

 

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