Ohio government corruption

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Former Butler County Commissioner indicted for corruption

The indictment revolves heavily around Michael Fox's alleged involvement with a close friend and the owner of NORMAP Telecommunications, Robert Schuler. As county commissioner, Fox is said to have used his political influence in order to secure a contract for NORMAP Telecommunications that was worth $1.8 million dollars. [1] The contract was for installing fiber optics across Butler County. After the contract was secured for NORMAP, the company was bought by Schuler. As owner of NORMAP, Schuler is alleged to have transferred $360,000 to Fox in 2002 in order to help him pay off his death. Schuler is also said to have transferred $100,000 to a consulting company that was owned by Fox. [2]


Cincinnati officials get taxpayer-bought free stuff

Cincinnati Mayor Mark Mallory has accepted $7,800 in free tickets to the Macy's Music Festival at Paul Brown Stadium over the past four years.

Hamilton County commissioners gave themselves first access on buying Reds Opening Day tickets, at face value, to the county-owned suite at Great American Ball Park. Sometimes the commissioners paid for the tickets with campaign funds and used them to reward campaign volunteers.

Many more county employees have free use of the luxury suites to entertain business leaders at the baseball games, to reward foster parents and to provide incentives to recycle. The suites are a perk from the lease agreements agreed upon by the Reds and the Bengals, which also include free food.

In 2008, county taxpayers paid for more than $20,000 worth of concessions for guests in the suites, such as Montgomery Inn barbeque, Donato's Pizza and Graeter's ice cream.

Hamilton County Auditor Dusty Rhodes has said the county should give up its ticket perks, calling it "a witches' brew of problems," yet the commissioners disagree.

According to the Ohio Ethics Commission, whose job it is to police the state's conflict-of-interest laws, free tickets to sporting events could, in some cases, "affect the objectivity and independence of judgment" of public officials in dealing with the teams.

County commissioners in charge of the suites say they're just trying to make use of the county-owned facilities: the two stadiums that were built using money from a voter-approved, half-cent sales tax from 1996.

"They're very common. I've seen them in just about every stadium built in the last 10 years, or 15 years," said Paul Anderson, associate director of the National Sports Law Institute at Marquette University and an expert in stadium financing. "Typically those are used for charity, or when the city is trying to sell itself. It's not supposed to be for the personal use of county board members."

The tickets weren't intended to be free, as the lease requires the county to pay for all tickets. However, there is no record of the county paying for any tickets, according to the county auditor's office.

The Reds' agreement says that the stadium "provide a private suite for Hamilton County's private use."[3]


Ohio Man Fined for Open Records Request

Contents

Cleveland, OH Brain Bardwell was ordered by an Ohio court on Monday to pay $1,050 to Cuyahoga County to cover the cost of the attorney who prosecuted his open records request lawsuit. Bardwell, who runs a non profit group called Citizens for Sunshine, made an open records request for documents relating to a potential medical mart, to be constructed in Cuyahoga County.


Cuyahoga County Reform Missing Restrictions on Campaign Donations

Issue 6 aims to remedy the problem of cronyism in the Cuyahoga County Comissioner's office. One of the current County Commissioners, Jimmy Dimora, has been investigated by the FBI for possibly helping individuals obtain county positions in exchange for campaign donations or kickbacks. Issue 6, supporters say, would counter such an abuse of power by requiring the county executive to be overseen by an eleven-member council. The county executive would need the council's approval before he or she could make any hiring decisions[4]..


Former Principal pleads guilty to theft of student drugs

In Sandusky County, Ohio Common Pleas Court on September 15, 2009, Timothy Wilhelm, 43, pleaded guilty to tampering with evidence and theft. He is required to pay restitution to replace stolen student medications and is ordered to stay 500 feet from the school, Stamm Elementary.

“It was my impression Wilhelm wanted to get this done,” Assistant Sandusky County Prosecutor Beth Tischler said. “(He seemed) remorseful, he seemed to have accepted what he did.”

Tischler said the prosecution will not recommend a sentence.

Wilhelm’s resigned September 5 and it was announced three days later at a Fremont City School Board meeting.[3]


Public records won't be as available in Ohio starting July 1

"Nobody's stopping anybody from having access to public records," Columbiana County Clerk of Courts Anthony Dattilio said. "They just won't have access to personal information or personal identifiers in that record."

Clerks offices in Ohio will remove personal identifying information from requested documents before handing them over to members of the public, including attorneys and abstractors.

The policies are under the Ohio Supreme Court Rules of Superintendence for the Courts of Ohio and take effect July 1. They would strike information such as social security numbers, except for the last four digits, financial account numbers, such as debit card and credit card numbers or banking information, employer and employee identification numbers and a juvenile's name in an abuse, neglect or dependency case, except for the child's initials or a generic abbreviation. However, names and dates of birth will remain public record.

A person cannot walk into a clerk of courts office to request to see a file and have it handed over to them for their perusal anymore. The information that these new policies forbid will have to be stricken from the records before they can see it.[3]


Ohio employee pleads not guilty for tampering with kids' grades

Wyandot County prosecutors are charging Gilliland on 34 counts for allegedly tampering with her children's grades, all third-degree felonies, as her indictment categorized.

The indictment shows the alleged incidents occurred on or about March 26, 2008, June 2, 2008, June 3, 2008, Oct. 28, 2008, Nov. 10, 2008, and Feb. 13, 2009, the Advertiser-Tribune reported.[5]


Ohio Supreme Court disserves the public in yet another records ruling -- editorial

"The Ohio Supreme Court has shoved the state farther down that slippery slope of keeping secrets from the public.

The court ruled unanimously last week that a report from a public agency investigating corruption allegations against that agency's boss is not a public record. It stressed that the documents used to compile the report are public records, but decided that the report itself is protected by attorney-client privilege."


Court: Ohio governor largely followed records law

"Gov. Ted Strickland largely followed public records law in responding to a Republican lawmaker's request for internal documents, but must continue reviewing additional records for possible release, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled today.

The court, in an unanimous opinion, said that Strickland responded to Rep. Seth Morgan's request for e-mails and other documents related to the governor's school-funding plan in a reasonable fashion. Strickland, a Democrat, erred by not acknowledging receipt of Morgan's initial request March 12 and providing a timeline for their release, the court said."


Ohio Supreme Court ruling strikes a blow against open records

"An investigatory report from a public agency probing corruption charges against its leader is not a public record, a unanimous Ohio Supreme Court ruled Tuesday.

The court acknowledged that the records and documents used to complete the final report are public but said the final product could be viewed as protected by attorney-client privilege, striking a blow against Ohio's open records codes."


Mayoral recall group sues to get public records

"Change Akron Now, the group seeking to recall Akron Mayor Don Plusquellic, filed another lawsuit today, seeking to force the city to release several public documents.

The lawsuit, filed in Summit County Common Pleas Court, claims the city has failed to provide Change Akron Now with receipts of Plusquellic's travel to Tampa in 2008; financial statements for city-issued credit cards for Plusquellic, his Cabinet and City Council members; and unredacted billing records for legal fees paid to a law firm for more than $1 million."


Strickland releases school-funding records

"Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland has released thousands of public records to a lawmaker who sued for more information on the development of the governor's school-funding plan.

Strickland on Tuesday provided hundreds of pages of notes and correspondence about the creation of his plan, along with thousands of comments gathered during public forums."


Akron swamped with public record requests

"Akron's law department is working overtime to respond to more than a hundred requests for public records since the beginning of the year — many from those working on an effort to recall Mayor Don Plusquellic.

Law Director Max Rothal estimated the city has spent about $200,000 in staff hours — including overtime and comp time — fulfilling record requests in the past 12 months."


Rep. Morgan takes public records case against Strickland to Supreme Court

"Rep. Seth Morgan, R-Huber Heights, today, April 6, took his public records case against Gov. Ted Strickland to the Ohio Supreme Court.

Morgan previously had filed two public records requests with Strickland’s office seeking the documents that are the basis of Strickland’s “evidence-based model” for school reform and school funding. Stickland so far has not communicated directly with his office, Morgan said."


WILLARD: Here's why cheers become jeers

"Ted Strickland and his administration's inclination to work secretly and privately have backfired regarding the governor's plans to overhaul Ohio's unconstitutional school funding plan.

As the governor and his aides met with group after group to construct his evidence-based model for education funding, it became clear to his invited guests that the conversations would be one-way.

The governor and his staff would listen attentively, seem to agree accordingly and then usher everyone out the door without providing any insight into the administration's true thoughts."


County officials named in public records lawsuit

"The Greene County prosecutor and two county commissioners are named in a lawsuit from a Beavercreek man seeking records about the county's 2003 Base Realignment and Closing Initiative agreement with the Dayton Development Coalition.

John Mitchel, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel who has campaigned for Ohio governor and for Congress, filed the suit Friday asking the court to force current and former Greene County officials to make public all documents pertaining to the county's financial oversight of a $100,000 grant and a $900,000 loan that the county gave to the non-profit Dayton Development Coalition."


CPS to learn today who wants top job

"Today, the Cincinnati school board will finally visit the post office and open its mail.

When they do, the school board members - and the public, eventually - will get their first look at the names and resumes of those who hope to become Cincinnati Public Schools' next leader.

The contents of P.O. Box 198008 in the Corryville post office have been a secret guarded so closely that even the school board doesn't know what is inside."


State making more records available online

"Ohio slowly is moving toward transparency and digital government accountability by making more public records available online.

A national survey finds that Ohio outperforms most states in providing public access to records and information on the Web.

Ohio tied for seventh among the 50 states in the survey, which scoured the Internet for 20 types of public records held by state governments. The survey found Ohio provided access to 15 of the 20."


Column: True leaders respect the laws

"I wondered what would happen when The Enquirer stripped this story across the top of Friday’s front page: “Enquirer sues to see applicants for CPS job.”

The school district’s scam is to skirt public records laws by asking applicants for the superintendent’s job to send résumés to a post office box – and school officials said they will not open the box until March 16. CPS’s logic, I think, is that résumés will then not have been “received” as public records until they are opened.

Why would The Enquirer not play along and wait a few days? Because we believe it’s illegal. And to be frank, if any entity in this community needs transparency in its deliberations and operations, it’s this school district."


Enquirer sues Cincinnati schools

"The Cincinnati school board is violating Ohio’s public records laws by not opening mail containing resumes seeking the district’s top job, The Enquirer alleged in a lawsuit filed Thursday.

The newspaper sued the school district in the Ohio 1st District Court of Appeals.

The suit seeks to have the board open the post office box where the resumes are mailed and provide public access to the resumes.

The school district asked applicants for the superintendent’s job to send resumes to a post office box – and school officials said they will not open the box until March 16."


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