Archive for June, 2009

Fourth of July DUI-OVI Crackdown by Ohio State Highway Patrol

June 30th, 2009

This morning the Ohio State Highway Patrol released a memorandum announcing that they will be out in force this holiday weekend.  “If you are driving impaired – we will arrest you,” sates the report.  These efforts are funded by federal “overtime” grants which allow for the increased patrols and are conducted in conjunction with Operation CARE (Combined Accident Reduction Effort) patrols.  They encourage motorists to use the 1-800-GRAB-DUI number to report suspected drivers.  Charles M. Rowland II encourages you to call 1-800-KICK-DUI if you are arrested.

Beavercreek DUI Attorney sponsors movie night

June 29th, 2009

We, at Brown, Rowland, Babb & Campbell were proud to sponsor the first Beavercreek Parks & Rec. Movie Night last Friday, June 26.  The crowd was big (bigger than shown because we took the picture while there was still daylight) and people had a good time with the kids.  The movie was Kung Fu Panda.

Man Arrested for Advocating Violence Against Federal Judges

June 26th, 2009
Dirksen Federal Building
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An internet neo-Nazi “talk show host” and Second Amendment nut-job was arrested in New Jersey for stating that three federal district court judges “deserved death.”  He was upset by the ruling in National Rifle Assn v. City of Chicagohttp://www.ca7.uscourts.gov where the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals refused to overturn a ban on handguns in the city of Chicago and some surrounding suburbs.  The man went further to post pictures of the three judges, phone numbers and the work address of the court and plot maps of the Dirksen Federal Courthouse in Chicago.  He made reference to the killing of another federal judge’s family members.  “Apparently, the 7th U.S. Circuit court didn’t get the hint after those killings,” he said in his posting. “It appears another lesson is needed.” The man will be transported to Chicago where he will hopefully be sentenced for a long prison term in the very building he suggested should be car bombed.  He faces ten (10) years in prison and $250,000 in fines.  The man was well known to law enforcement and to advocates who monitor hate-speech like the Southern Poverty Law Center (www.splcenter.org/).

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U.S. Supreme Court upholds Fourth Amendment

June 23rd, 2009
President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe ...

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In one of his final decisions, if not his final one, as a justice, Supreme Court Justice David Souter ruled for a divided Court Thursday morning that the intrusive strip search of an Arizona middle-school girl in pursuit of drugs was a violation of her Fourth Amendment rights. But because the constitutional standard was not clear at the time of the search, the Court agreed that the assistant principal who ordered the search in 2003 was entitled to qualified immunity from liability for the violation. The ruling came in Safford Unified School District v. Redding, one of the most widely-watched decisions of the term.

The case involved Savana Redding, then 13, who attended a public school with a zero tolerance policy toward possession of all drugs. Acting on reports that the girl had prescription-strength ibuprofen pills, an assistant principal ordered the search to be conducted by the school nurse. She was told to strip to her underwear and pull out her bra and underpants to show that she was not hiding individual pills. None were found. Her mother sued the school district claiming a Fourth Amendment violation, and last year an en banc ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that the search was unconstitutional and the assistant principal was not immune from liability.

Souter said that under the Court’s precedent on student searches in the 1985 case New Jersey v. T.L.O, the school was justified in conducting a limited search of the girl’s backpack and outer clothing. But requiring her to strip to her underwear and partly expose herself was excessive, Souter said. Such searches, Souter said, are “so degrading” that some school districts have banned them “no matter what the facts may be.” But Souter said that lower court interpretations of the T.L.O. case and others vary widely enough that the school officials who ordered the underwear search were not violating “clearly established law” and therefore deserved immunity from liability for their acts.

The Court divided this way in the Redding case: Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. and Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Stephen Breyer and Samuel Alito Jr. joined Souter on both the constitutional and the qualified immunity issue. Justices John Paul Stevens and Ruth Bader Ginsburg agreed with Souter on the constitutional violation, but dissented on qualified immunity, arguing that the constitutional standard should have been clear to school officials. Justice Clarence Thomas agreed with the majority that the school official should be immune, but he dissented in part because he argued that the search did not violate the Fourth Amendment in the first place.

The Court also ruled in three other cases, including Horne v. Flores, a dispute over the adequacy of programs for English language learners in an Arizona school district. The 5-4 decision prompted Justice Stephen Breyer to read from his dissent from the bench.

The justices adjourned without issuing a ruling in probably its most-anticipated case of the term, Ricci v. DeStefano, involving the claim of non-African American New Haven, Conn., firefighters who claim they were victims of race discrimination because they were not given promotions after passing a test. The city threw out the test after no African-Americans scored high enough for promotions.

The Court indicated that Monday will be the final decision day of the term. An orders list, which may include cases that the Court has agreed to hear in the fall, is also expected. For more on Thursday’s action at the Supreme Court, check back here later today.

This article first appeared on The BLT: The Blog of Legal Times.

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Good News for Dayton, Ohio

June 23rd, 2009
Sacred Heart Church in Dayton, OH. Photo by Gr...

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Good News:  On June 24, upDayton released a report stating that Dayton has “enormous potential” in attracting and keeping talented young people due to the many universities in the region.  The full report sets out what young professionals want in order to stay and spur innovation and economic growth.  You can see the full report at UpDayton.com.  The Dayton Daily News article on the study is available here: http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/dayton-news/dayton-area-has-enormous-potential-according-to-report-176639.html?cxtype=rss_local-news

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