Posts Tagged ‘Miami University’

WedMar27

Butler County resists switching to full-time judges

Posted by akiefaber March 27th, 2013, 10:18 am Post a Comment

Other local jurisdictions made the change long ago

Judge Rob Lyons sits on the bench in area I court in Oxford, admits he routinely seals misdemeanor convictions for Miami University students so it doesnÕt have an adverse effect on their future schooling or ability to get a job after college. Photo taken by Tony Tribble.

Judge Rob Lyons sits on the bench in area I court in Oxford, admits he routinely seals misdemeanor convictions for Miami University students so it doesn’t have an adverse effect on their future schooling or ability to get a job after college. Photo taken by Tony Tribble.

Sheila McLaughlin reports:

Thomas Moyer, the late Ohio Supreme Court chief justice, tried for more than a decade to eliminate the use of part-time judges across the state.

They more recently came under attack by Butler County Prosecutor Mike Gmoser.

He called one local judge “the fox in the hen house” and was instrumental in getting the judge kicked off of 10 drunken driving cases.

He accused another of showing favoritism to a judicial colleague’s law associate. He asked the Supreme Court to all but strip part-time judges of their private law practices, saying it was a conflict.

Nothing happened.

“That solution is neither feasible nor advised. It would force some judges to immediately leave the bench and discourage others from seeking office,” Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor wrote in a statement to The Enquirer.

She also suggested that any move toward abolishing part-time courts in a particular community must come from local officials.

While other counties in Southwest Ohio have long ago gone to full-time misdemeanor courts or are looking at the possibility now, Butler County has resisted the change. The county has three area courts that cost taxpayers about $1.2 million a year to run.

“There’s always politics involved,” said Matthew Crehan, a retired Butler County Common Pleas Judge who led a 2006 study that looked at consolidating the county’s three area courts – Area I in Oxford, Area II in Hamilton, and Area III in West Chester – and making them full-time.

“You’ve got three part-time judges who have private law practices, and they get paid pretty good money for one day a week (as a judge). They get retirement and everything else,” Crehan said. “The problem is that there is just simply a natural conflict between being a lawyer and being a judge. You can’t serve two masters.”

All three Butler County Area Court judges – Rob Lyons, Dan Haughey and Kevin McDonough – say they can. By law, they aren’t allowed to practice in each other’s courts.

Lyons, who presides over the court in Oxford, was removed from the 10 drunken driving cases challenging Ohio’s alcohol breath testing procedures. Lyons had used the same approach in fighting for clients in his criminal defense practice in West Chester. (more…)

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ThuMar21

Butler County judge wants Enquirer suit dismissed

Posted by akiefaber March 21st, 2013, 2:15 pm Post a Comment
Judge Rob Lyons sits on the bench in area I court in Oxford, admits he routinely seals misdemeanor convictions for Miami University students so it doesnÕt have an adverse effect on their future schooling or ability to get a job after college. Photo taken by Tony Tribble.

Judge Rob Lyons sits on the bench in area I court in Oxford, admits he routinely seals misdemeanor convictions for Miami University students so it doesn’t have an adverse effect on their future schooling or ability to get a job after college. Photo taken by Tony Tribble.

Sheila McLaughlin reports:

A Butler County judge wants the Ohio Supreme Court to dismiss The Enquirer’s suit against him, saying he fixed his mistake in improperly sealing a case involving the Miami University rape flier and the issue is moot.

In a brief filed with the Supreme Court, part-time Judge Rob Lyons of Area I Court in Oxford also maintains The Enquirer has no right “to insert itself into judicial and prosecutorial functions that determined the outcome of the underlying criminal case.”

“Once the Respondent Judge realized that the defendant’s underlying plea agreement was being undermined, it was far more important to deal with that issue than to alter the process to cater to a newspaper looking for a story,” the brief written by Butler County Assistant Prosecutor Dan Ferguson said.

The Enquirer sued Lyons in November after he immediately sealed the conviction of the former student who posted the “Top Ten Ways to Get away with rape,” flier in a co-ed dorm. The Enquirer alleged the sealing was improper because Lyons did not hold a hearing and that Lyons had cited the wrong law on a form he signed to seal the case.

After The Enquirer filed suit and Lyons found out he had improperly sealed the case, the student was allowed to withdraw his plea and prosecutors decided not to pursue further charges. That allowed Judge Rob Lyons to correct a mistake he made sealing the case the first time. He sealed it again immediately after the plea withdrawal. Lyons said he routinely sealed cases of Miami University students.

The Enquirer filed a second suit in the Ohio Supreme Court after Lyons admitted in a deposition that he had sealed convictions for several years using the same form citing the wrong law. The Enquirer has asked the state’s highest court to force Lyons to open the records. Both cases are pending.

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MonMar11

Many crimes kept secret in small Ohio college towns

Posted by akiefaber March 11th, 2013, 1:45 pm Post a Comment

Butler County investigation: Oxford leads the way

Judge Rob Lyons sits on the bench in area I court in Oxford, admits he routinely seals misdemeanor convictions for Miami University students so it doesnÕt have an adverse effect on their future schooling or ability to get a job after college. Photo taken by Tony Tribble.

Judge Rob Lyons sits on the bench in area I court in Oxford, admits he routinely seals misdemeanor convictions for Miami University students so it doesnÕt have an adverse effect on their future schooling or ability to get a job after college. Photo taken by Tony Tribble.

Sheila McLaughlin reports:

They line up every Thursday in Area I Court in Oxford, fresh-faced and chatty. Shoulders sag under the weight of backpacks stuffed with laptops, books and classwork from Miami University. More than likely, they’ve been caught drinking underage or were charged over the previous weekend with petty crimes such as disorderly conduct.

By the time they appear before Judge Rob Lyons on a date down the road, if a long-running trend holds true, 40 percent of them will walk out with a criminal record that’s sealed from public sight.

Judges in other small Ohio college towns seal criminal records, too, though not to the extent of Lyons, who presides over the smallest court among them. Lyons, The Enquirer reported last month, sealed 2,945 misdemeanor cases in the past five years.

An Enquirer analysis of court records in several Ohio college towns shows an unusually high number of cases being sealed compared with courts in large metro areas where a college is just one thread in the overall fabric of the community.

Picture 1The Enquirer’s analysis compared the number of sealed misdemeanor cases in each court in 2012 with the number of misdemeanor cases completed last year.

Christo Lassiter, a law professor at the University of Cincinnati, questions whether students in towns dominated by a college are getting preferential treatment or are they just working the system.

“To some extent, Miami students have a pipeline. You find out what works and you do it. They’ve figured it out,” Lassiter said. “It could be just the pipeline, or it could be the fact that these people do have the money to go to a lawyer.”

In Bowling Green Municipal Court, one in six misdemeanor cases is sealed. At municipal court in Athens County – the home of Ohio University – a third of the cases are kept secret. In the Portage County Municipal Court, where Kent State University sits, 22 percent of the misdemeanor cases were sealed last year.

By comparison, larger metro area courts seal a much smaller proportion of misdemeanor cases. For instance, the court that handles cases involving University of Dayton students sealed 3.5 percent in 2012. (more…)

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MonFeb25

Last week in West Chester: Alicia Lang gets new lungs

Posted by akiefaber February 25th, 2013, 4:15 pm Post a Comment
Alicia Lang participates in a walk in her honor during the Alicia’s Lungs benefit at Lakota West High School in May of 2011. It was one of many fundraisers the family had as Lang waited for new lungs. Photo taken by Amanda Davidson.

Alicia Lang participates in a walk in her honor during the Alicia’s Lungs benefit at Lakota West High School in May of 2011. It was one of many fundraisers the family had as Lang waited for new lungs. Photo taken by Amanda Davidson.

To let West Chester and Liberty Township residents catch up with the news that they need to know, WestChesterBuzz.com will list and link to all of last week’s top local stories every Monday.

WestChesterBuzz.com also recently added a new video page. To view West Chester and Liberty Township related videos, visit westchesterbuzz.com/videos.

Lakota West grad wakes up after double-lung transplant – When Alicia Lang finally woke up Saturday, Feb. 16, at the Cleveland Clinic, she did so with a new pair of lungs. Lang, a 20-year-old Lakota West graduate who has cystic fibrosis, has been waiting for more than two years for a double-lung transplant. On Feb. 11, the long wait was over. Lang’s operation was a success. WestChesterBuzz.com reported the story last week.

Pat Hiltman is resigning effective immediately from his trustee post because a recent job change. Photo provided.

Pat Hiltman is resigning effective immediately from his trustee post because a recent job change. Photo provided.

Liberty Township trustee Pat Hiltman steps down – After serving seven years as a Liberty Township trustee, Pat Hiltman is stepping down, 10 months shy of finishing his second term. Hiltman said he was resigning effective immediately because a recent job change requires extensive travel.

Justice doled out differently in Butler Co. courts – Sheila McLaughlin reported last week: The weekly cattle call at Butler County Area III Court swells with a mixed bag of people charged with minor crimes and traffic violations. They spend hours waiting for their cases to be called. Many plead guilty, get probation and make a stop at the clerk’s window to pay their fines. Most go on their way with a criminal record that anyone can see.

Gun rally in West Chester – There were times, on a beautiful sunny Saturday afternoon in West Chester, when the Day of Resistance gathering felt like a heavily armed history class. Hundreds of people stood, many with pistols on their hips or semi-automatic rifles slung over their shoulders, and listened to speakers talk about the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions of 1798, about the Federalists versus the anti-Federalists debate, and the history of the legal theory of nullification.

Two different police departments say this suspect is responsible for stealing donations from a pair of local mosques on the same morning. Photo provided.

Two different police departments say this suspect is responsible for stealing donations from a pair of local mosques on the same morning. Photo provided.

West Chester police looking for thief who stole from mosques – West Chester and Miamisburg police departments are trying to identify a man, who detectives say is responsible for stealing donations from a pair of local mosques on the same morning. Crime Stoppers released photos of the suspect last Wednesday.

Lakota West RB Mikel Horton adds offers – Minnesota and Western Michigan offered Lakota West junior running back Mikel Horton last Wednesday, according Lakota West head football coach Larry Cox. Horton, who has received interest from Louisville, Penn State and Michigan State, also has offers from Indiana, Kent State, Toledo, Bowling Green and Kentucky.

ASU offers Lakota East OL Jarrett LaRubbio – Arizona State offered Lakota East junior offensive lineman Jarrett LaRubbio last Tuesday, Lakota East coach Rick Haynes told Cincinnati Enquirer high school sports recruiting writer Mike Dyer. Haynes later told Dyer that Western Michigan is offering, as well. he 6-foot-5, 265-pound lineman received offers earlier this month from Duke, Kentucky and Nebraska. He also has offers from Akron, Pittsburgh, Bowling Green, Toledo, Kent State and Ohio.

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FriFeb22

Justice doled out differently in Butler Co. courts

Posted by akiefaber February 22nd, 2013, 11:08 am Post a Comment

Judge’s practice of sealing records doesn’t sit too well

Sheila McLaughlin reports:

The weekly cattle call at Butler County Area III Court swells with a mixed bag of people charged with minor crimes and traffic violations.

They spend hours waiting for their cases to be called. Many plead guilty, get probation and make a stop at the clerk’s window to pay their fines. Most go on their way with a criminal record that anyone can see.

This is not Butler County Area I Court in Oxford, a college town 24 miles away where a different judge says he routinely seals misdemeanor criminal convictions for students at Miami University in a move that keeps their names and the details of their crimes secret.

The Enquirer reported Sunday that Area I Judge Rob Lyons, a Miami University grad, has sealed an average of 589 cases a year since 2008 in the county’s lowest-volume court – far more than those sealed in courts in West Chester or Hamilton.

“When I read (state law), I don’t see a Miami college student exception,” said Jack Grove, an attorney and chairman of the local public defender commission. “I understand there are some unique circumstances in a college town, but some would also say that is out of control.”

Grove, an Oxford Township resident who practices civil law, served as a prosecutor in Area I Court during the 1970s after graduating from law school. Cases weren’t routinely sealed back then, he said.

“I think this has more to do with the judge on the case than it does the geographic location,” Grove said. “What happens in the court is public. It’s part of government and it’s not meant to be secret.”

Sealing cases, Grove said, undermines what criminal laws are supposed to accomplish – a sentence that’s aimed at discouraging future crimes and punishing and rehabilitating the offender.

Some defendants in West Chester this week expressed outrage over Lyons’ practice. (more…)

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ThuFeb21

Jekyll and Hyde show coming to Miami VOA on Saturday

Posted by akiefaber February 21st, 2013, 11:25 am Post a Comment

The themes in Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic horror novel are explored in the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park’s Off the Hill production of The Traveling Jekyll and Hyde Show, by playwright Russell Davis.

Photo provided.

Photo provided.

The free public performance takes place at 3 p.m. this Saturday at the Miami University Voice of America Learning Center in West Chester.

This show tells the story of a tiny touring theatre valiantly attempting to tell the story of the infamous scientist who learns to split his good side from his evil one.

Unfortunately, the three actresses are sabotaged at every turn by a domineering director.

As the women in the company slowly take control of the story, they also learn to take control of their lives.

The Learning Center is located at 7847 VOA Park Drive, at the corner of Cox Road and VOA Park Drive, in West Chester.

For more information visit www.miamioh.edu/voalc.

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MonFeb18

INVESTIGATION: Thousands of Butler crimes are sealed

Posted by akiefaber February 18th, 2013, 10:00 am Post a Comment

Judge admits method wrong; others question if it’s fair to let Miami students off the hook

Sheila McLaughlin reports:

A few thousand people – many of them students at Miami University – have committed crimes in Butler County in the past 14 years that are kept secret. Their conviction records have been sealed.

It’s a routine practice in the Butler County courtroom of Judge Rob Lyons. His use of the practice came to light after he granted secrecy to a former Miami student who admitted to creating a flier about how to get away with rape.

Lyons, a part-time judge whose private law practice helps clients seal their criminal records, admitted in a sworn deposition that he’s been sealing cases improperly for the 14 years he’s been on the bench. Lyons has sealed 2,945 cases – more than a third of the new misdemeanor cases filed – in the past five years, an Enquirer analysis shows, using data from area court officials and the Ohio Supreme Court.

“This is a college town,” Lyons said in the recent deposition. Lyons, a Miami University graduate, testified that he didn’t want convictions to hurt students’ chances to graduate or get a job after college.

It is impossible to tell exactly what the charges were in the sealed cases, but they are thought to be misdemeanors, which could include crimes ranging from underage possession of alcohol or disorderly conduct to minor theft or domestic violence. It also is impossible to know who has been granted secrecy and whether those people were originally charged with more serious crimes.

Butler County officials denied The Enquirer’s request for an accounting of cases Lyons has sealed. The Enquirer then filed a lawsuit Friday in the Ohio Supreme Court seeking to get the cases opened.

“Are students getting special treatment, special handling that other young adults don’t get?” asked Carolyn Washburn, editor of The Enquirer. “Are people being investigated thoroughly? Are they being punished properly? Does the elected prosecutor do a good job? Does the judge do a good job? The public can’t know if records are sealed.” (more…)

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TueDec11

Miami’s VOALC to host shopping event with Santa

Posted by akiefaber December 11th, 2012, 10:17 am Post a Comment

Santa in Miami hoodieThe Miami University Voice of America Learning Center will host a special holiday shopping event that will feature Santa Claus and plenty of Miami University gifts. The holiday shopping event will take place this Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Learning Center’s lobby.

This will be the fourth year that the Miami Bookstore and Alumni Association will be setting up the special holiday shopping event at the Voice of America Learning Center.

Santa will at the event and available for free family pictures from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The Voice of America Learning Center is located at 7847 VOA Park Drive, at the corner of VOA Park Drive and Cox Road in West Chester.

For more information call the Learning Center at 513-895-8862, or visit the Center’s web site at www.muohio.edu/voalc.

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FriNov16

‘Fibers of the Soul’ exhibition opens Sunday at VOALC

Posted by akiefaber November 16th, 2012, 7:51 am Post a Comment

“Fibers of the Soul,” an exhibition of the work of West Chester artist Carole Gary Staples, opens with a free public reception from 2 to 5 p.m. this Sunday at Miami University’s Voice of America Learning Center in West Chester.

Staples, a native of Pittsburgh, has been designing with fabric and creating art for over thirty years. The exhibition, which will be on display at the Learning Center through Jan. 30, 2013, is from her collection of art quilts and fiber arts.

Her works are part of several touring exhibitions, including “In Celebration of Faith Ringgold” from the City College of New York, and “Textural Rhythms: Quilting the Jazz Traditions,” from the National Afro-American Museum and Cultural Center.

Regionally, Staples’ creations have been part of exhibitions at the Middletown Art Center, Kennedy Heights Art Center, and Northern Kentucky University. She has also been featured in the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts “Migrations of the African Diaspora” exhibition, as well as “Quilts for Change” at the Cintas Center at Xavier University.

Her training began at a very early age when she was selected to attend the prestigious Tam O’ Shanter art program at Carnegie Mellon University. She continued her artistic training at the University of Pittsburgh, and graduated with her Bachelor of Arts degree from Seton Hill University.

The exhibition will be on display can be viewed from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday.

Miami University’s Voice of America Learning Center is located at 7847 VOA Park Drive, at the corner of Cox Road and VOA Park Drive in West Chester. More information is available by visiting the Learning Center’s web site, MiamiOH.edu/VOALC, or by calling 513-895-8862.

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FriSep7

Photo exhibition opens at VOA Learning Center Sunday

Posted by akiefaber September 7th, 2012, 7:53 am Post a Comment

Photographs from 31 members of the West Chester Photo Club will be on display at Miami University’s Voice of America Learning Center through Nov. 14, beginning with a free public reception from 2 to 5 p.m. this Sunday.

The exhibition, Looking Out Looking In, is a collection of more than 60 works by photo club members. The display is a unique opportunity to see the world and our corner of it through their eyes and lenses.

Founded ten years ago, the West Chester Photo Club today has 50 members.

During their monthly meetings a photo activity is presented and reviewed, a process the club calls OPUS (Our Photos Under Scrutiny), an opportunity for sharing ideas and perspectives on members’ work.

In addition, the club hosts weekly “Scoot N Shoot” activities every Thursday where members meet and travel to a predetermined location for group shooting.

The club’s exhibition at the VOALC will be available for viewing from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday.

Miami’s VOA Learning Center is located at 7847 VOA Park Drive, at the corner of Cox Road and VOA Park Drive in West Chester. For more information call the Learning Center at 895-8862 or visit www.MiamiOH.edu/voalc.

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