As the KNS v. County Commission trial continues, there may be more breaking news later in the day that may or may not be related.
UPDATE: WATE reports:
Knox County Commissioner Greg "Lumpy" Lambert is the subject of possible sanctions for not turning in his January phone records to the court where the Sunshine Trial is taking place.[..]
Attorney Richard Hollow, who represents the Knoxville News Sentinel, filed a motion for sanctions against Lambert saying he has refused to turn over his cell phone records after the jury was released Monday afternoon.
Hollow's motion also contends that Lambert has admitted to violating the Sunshine Law by being one of "two or more people talking about public policy" outside of an open meeting.
Unfortunately, the state's "Sunshine Law" provides little in the way of penalty:
8-44-106. Enforcement — Jurisdiction. —
(a) The circuit courts, chancery courts, and other courts which have equity jurisdiction, have jurisdiction to issue injunctions, impose penalties, and otherwise enforce the purposes of this part upon application of any citizen of this state.
(b) In each suit brought under this part, the court shall file written findings of fact and conclusions of law and final judgments, which shall also be recorded in the minutes of the body involved.
(c) The court shall permanently enjoin any person adjudged by it in violation of this part from further violation of this part. Each separate occurrence of such meetings not held in accordance with this part constitutes a separate violation.
(d) The final judgment or decree in each suit shall state that the court retains jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter for a period of one (1) year from date of entry, and the court shall order the defendants to report in writing semiannually to the court of their compliance with this part.
So the only defined penalty seems to be a permanent injunction. Which is all the KNS is seeking against County Commission as a whole (other than a meaningless "do over"). The whole thing is boiling down to a tempest in a teapot. Business as usual will go on as usual.
(I guess the "impose penalties" could provide somewhat broader latitude. But what penalties? A $50 contempt of court fine? Lumpy has already established that $50 is the cost of doing business in Knox County in re. fines for stormwater violations.)
The best part of today's action, though, was Scooby saying:
"I am a lay person," he said. "I am a part-time county commissioner. I’m not going to sit here and speculate what the law is. ... I’m not going to try and speculate on what (the rules) say."
Yet this is the same Scooby who said that the law and the rules prevented Commission from having any kind of public participation regarding appointments. Just like a Republican to want to have it both ways. But shouldn't a county commissioner be at least somewhat familiar with the law?
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If Lumpy is sanctioned for
If Lumpy is sanctioned for not turning over his phone records, is that not different from whether or not he violated the Sunshine Law? What penalties can a judge impose by "sanction"?
Bean, you out there?
"The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones." - John Maynard Keynes
I know that they said on
I know that they said on WBIR that not handing over the records is a violation of the sunshine law but I just don't see how it could be.
To be honest, KNS's lawyers may have an easier time getting his cell phone records than he would. He has Cricket. I used to have Cricket and IIRC, it was almost impossible to get your own records. I don't think they even keep records of calls back then. Most cell phone carriers allow you to access your call list online, Cricket doesn't. It's one of their cost cutting measures.
Stackhouse mentioned that they could get his records since they had carrier and phone number. Maybe that was her way of telling them that he may not be able to get them but they can. I don't know.
I may be wrong, but I think
I may be wrong, but I think what Stackhouse was saying is if the plaintiffs have Lumpy's phone number and all the other Commissioners phone records, all they have to do is look for Lumpy's number in those other records (incoming or outgoing), i.e. they don't need Lumpy's records to get the information they want which is calls between Lumpy and other Commissioners).
If Lumpy can get them, he needs to turn them over. The suggestion for other counsel may also be based on the fact that Lumpy is being singled out. Owings has to struggle with a conflict of interest from the outset, trying to represent everyone.
calls between Lumpy and
calls between Lumpy and other Commissioners
...or perhaps the Sheriff? (Tim that is)
...or perhaps Dwight Van De
...or perhaps Dwight Van De Vate or Mayor Ragsdale.
Be interesting to see if cell or office phone numbers for those folks show up on any Commissioners phone records.
Interesting info but not illegal
While it would be very interesting to see who else Lumpy was talking to other than the commissioners, it would not a violation of the Open Meetings Act.
Council can see from the records they have what commissioners were talking to whom, Tim or Mike or their minions.
I may be wrong, but I think
I hadn't thought about that.
but the timing could be important
If the calls were placed/rec'd Jan 31 during the meeting recesses.
If the judge is asking for the records...
and Lumpy continues to refuse to attempt to get them, would it be considered contempt of court? CBT, I know you're a lawyer, so maybe you could answer this. If the judge does cite him for contempt how far could the punishment go? And might that have something to do with the advice to get a lawyer for himself from Owings?
_________________________________________________

"You can't fix stupid..." ~ Ron White"
"I never said I wasn't a brat..." ~ Talidapali
I don't know why Owings
I don't know why Owings advised him to get his own lawyer. We can all speculate. I pointed out the fine line of conflict of interest Owings has to walk in representing 'everyone'.
The Rules of Civil Procedure (Rule 37) spells out sanctions for someone who does not comply with discovery requests. It can range from monetary penalties (essentially a daily fine), to exclusion of certain evidence all the way to a judgment on the merits of the case. He's not my client, but it would appear to me if Lumpy had these records or could get them with reasonable effort, he should turn them over.
lumpy and cricket
Cricket: what kind of cell service is that for a grown professional individual?
What Lumpy could be had for is contempt? What Hollow wants is default judgment against him. What Stackhouse is saying is that default is too much punishment. She could also be saying that they can tell from everyone else's records which commissioners he was talking to. The question is what the hell else is he hiding?
The other question is why hasn't Scoobie been told to get another lawyer?
And, finally, didn't those reporters clean up good for the witness stand?
pgs
Pam Strickland
"We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be." ~Kurt Vonnegut
As far as Stackhouse's
As far as Stackhouse's argument, what about phone calls he had with people other than commissioners that relate to the case. Regarding those calls the other commissoner phone records would not help. If he is willing to take take the court's punishment instead of giving up those calls they must be something.
[redacted]
[redacted]
The bottom line is obvious. He must be afraid of something.
It does make the mind reel...
Lumpy simply will not take his lumps, I guess.
Or?
[redacted]
Maybe he was calling the Mayor? One thing is for sure, he does not want the court or the commissioners to know who he were calling.
Or?
Maybe he's just Lumpy and thinks the rules don't apply to him. Could be just thumbing his nose at the KNS, although since it's turned into thumbing his nose at the chancellor, he might want to reconsider.
"The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones." - John Maynard Keynes
Oh, oh, I've been redacted.
This is how Wikipedia defines it: "In the study of literature, redaction can refer to a form of editing, in which multiple source texts are combined together (redacted), and are subjected to minor alteration to make it appear that they are a single work. Often this is simply a method of collecting together a series of writings on a vaguely similar theme, and creating a definitive and coherent work."
I don't think that was the case. I know the goal was not to censor me, but to save my butt from writing some of the sleazy things (perhaps sleazy enough to evoke a law suit?) that my mind can sometimes conjure. I appreciate that, but I'd rather the whole post just be deleted or eliminated in those cases.
As a legal term: "Redaction
As a legal term:
"Redaction is done when a public record contains sensitive, private, or confidential information that is taken out of the document, or redacted, in a way that does not distort the meaning of the record. The practice of striking or otherwise taking out this type of material is called redaction."
The reason the comment wasn't deleted is because it deletes the comment and all the replies, and people had already replied to it. If it is unpublished, the replies remain, but they no longer make any sense.
Just some blog trivia and oddities.
The law department turned
The law department turned against one of their own clients today, and it wasn't Lumpy:
(link...)
Harmon's not toeing the
Harmon's not toeing the party line.
And he probably does has his own political agenda - he's a politician, after all. Doesn't make what he's saying about Commission any less true. In fact, some of it (e.g. factions) is pretty much common knowledge.
"The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones." - John Maynard Keynes
When Stackhouse asked him if
When Stackhouse asked him if his power would have been amplified by not allowing term-limited commissioners to vote, he should have said, "No, I would still be a lone dissenter."
Well that makes sense, Neal...
I'll try harder not to send in anything that goes over the top & I do appreciate your watchful eye. Thanks for clarifying the procedures.
I should mention there are
I should mention there are valid, legal objections to providing some information. Maybe some of those apply here. Right now, we're all just guessing.
Yes, but a party has thirty
Yes, but a party has thirty days to assert an objection, at which point the requesting party can seek court intervention. From news accounts, it appears that Comm. Lambert refused to provide any substantive response whatsoever. Until Comm. Lambert gets elected Chancellor, he doesn't get to make that decision.
No one likes to have lawyers scrutinizing their life. My brain would explode if Herb Moncier started digging around my business. I can understand how someone would chafe at having to make these records available but, under the circumstances, that falls into the category of "TOUGH." Comm. Lambert's actions demonstrate a lack of respect for the legal system. I hope the court makes an example out of him.
www.herstonlaw.com
There's also the issue of
There's also the issue of the KNS apparently not raising this issue until now. Didn't Comm. Lambert refuse to provide the records several months back, saying he dind't have them? Why wasn't a motion filed by KNS' lawyers to compel him to provide the information months ago? That's the usual procedure.
Just a curious question. As I said, we're all just guessing based on very limited information from news stories.
Mark Harmon testified today
Mark Harmon testified today and shot holes in the testimony of Scoobie. Glad to see him there fighting for the truth. With the testimony presented so far, this jury must be seeing the obvious shenanigans of that whole appointment process.
I always find it interesting
I always find it interesting that there's this supposed "Sheriff's Faction". Other than the budget, what does Commission vote on which affects the Sheriff's Office? The KCSO essentially runs itself, same as the other fee offices.
Chad, don't play the naif.
Chad, don't play the naif.
I doubt it's escaped you that the appointment of Lee Tramel was the fulcrum around which most of the other events turned: Lumpy's "offer" to Jonathan Wimmer; Richard Cate's appointment and attempted early swearing-in; Diane Jordan's changing her vote from Davis to Tramel (and getting her stepson Josh appointed); Chucky B.'s appointment, early swearing-in and tie-breaking vote for Tramel; Mark Cawood (a Democrat) voting for Bolus and Tramel over good Democratic candidates.
You think all these serendipitous events (and more) transpired for no reason at all?
Don't pee on my leg and tell me it's raining.
really?
I always find it interesting that there's this supposed "Sheriff's Faction".
C'mon. That might fly at the comments section of wbir.com or perhaps knoxnews, but I was under the impression that you might have thought higher of the intellect level round these parts.
I always find it interesting
Ditto what Betty said. Would it be better if we called them the anti-Ragsdale faction?
knox county two questions
two questions for candidates in the next Knox County election:
1. Have you ever served in any elected or appointed capacity in Knoxville or Knox county? (yes = "no" vote)
2. Do you or any members of your family work (or draw a paycheck) from any local government job? (yes = "no" vote)
There are legislators at all
There are legislators at all levels who group together for various, common reasons...homeowners, developers, religious reasons, economic reasons, etc. At the state level, block voting is a requirement for most Democrats. I suspect Commissioners often group together for various reasons as well.
My point was not that the former Sheriff is an influential political figure (he is, and I've said so repeatedly before), but I don't believe he plays near the role in all these various issues which come before Commission. To read the papers, it's as if the former Sheriff is on the phone to direct votes on every resolution. I don't believe that's the case.
it's as if the former
it's as if the former Sheriff is on the phone to direct votes on every resolution. I don't believe that's the case.
Yes, but Lumpy won't turn over his phone records so we don't know for sure, do we?
(Bada-bing. I'll be here all week. Don't forget to tip your bartenders and servers.)
My head is going to pop
Does it make any sense that the law department has proven two of their own clients guilty? I see that its a very tricky case to try, but I don't see the strategy. Are they trying to prove a few guilty, but protect the rest?
I'll also mention city
I'll also mention city 'county' commissioners v. 'county' county commissioners. That sometimes plays a role. As for Jan. 31, maybe some were not pro-Sheriff, but rather anti-Ragsdale.
One other thing. We've heard of calls by Moore to the Sheriff. They have every Commissioner's phone records (except Lambert's), so what do those show? How about calls to Ragsdale, Arms or Van De Vate? Dwight was at the Jan. 31 meeting lobbying hard for Ragsdale's choices. Surely calls and discussions were had before the meeting. KNS, do tell.
Remember
Calls to lawyers, sheriffs or even Ragsdale were not a violation of the sunshine law. ONLY deliberation with other commissioners is a violation. -- s.
That's true Sandra, but
That's true Sandra, but mention was made in the KNS story this week about Moore's calls to the Sheriff. If that's 'news', I'm just interested in who else notable they may have been talking to.
We're a long way from the finish line in this one, with a few turns and surprises likely. But, in the end, it's discussion v. deliberation. I may not agree, but I'll trust the jury on this one. They're rarely wrong (see thread on OJ for an exception).
I think Moore's four calls
I think Moore's four calls with Valliant during the Jan 31 meeting seem pretty interesting.
Interesting perhaps
Interesting perhaps, but not illegal. Not a violation of sunshine law. Don't understand why the chancellor is letting this case range off topic. Of course, the fact that Herb is involved could have something to do with that....
-- s.
I take it there is no legal
I take it there is no legal obstacle for a county commisioner to have as their paid attorney, a person that also is paid(?) to lobby county commission?
Is this suit brought by KNS
Is this suit brought by KNS and 9 citizens, or is it McElroy and 9 citizens? If it is KNS, shouldn't the newspaper be reporting the news instead of making it? Every article in the KNS about this trial starts out with original material, then reverts back to the same old stuff. And they certainly present a rather one sided view. Please don't think I am siding with the commission, I'm not. Its just that McElroy has a rather public forum for his side of the issue, and I think he also has a responsibility to report the news, not make the news.
The name of the plaintiff on
The name of the plaintiff on the lawsuit is McElroy.
The nine citizens joined the suit courtesy of Moncier and Fansler.
EDIT: The name of the plaintiff on original lawsuit is "JOHN McELROY, II, a citizen and resident of Knox County, Tennessee"
I found the PDF at the KNS:
(link...)
We all know who is paying
We all know who is paying for the defense, I wonder who is paying for the plantiff's lawyers.
In the past, it seemed that KNS has always been pro-Ragsdale, is this what is driving McElroy?
The Sentinel is
The Sentinel is Pro-Ragsdale?
You been hiding under a rock for the past four months' worth of P-Card, John Werner, Margie Loyd and Cynthia Finch stories?
Why is it so hard to believe that County Commission's blatant flouting of the law and of common decency triggered this lawsuit?
Honestly, this attitude just astonishes me.
I was referring to reporting
I was referring to reporting by the KNS prior to the p-card discoveries.
It is not difficult to see what the commission did, and probably continues to do. Anyone with any political savvy knows that you have to have your votes before any meeting, be it a committee meeting or the full commission. My guess is that the commissioners all talk about issues all of the time. You scratch my back, and I'll scratch yours sort of deals.
Why didn't McElroy let others take the commission to task, and cover the action from the sidelines, like newspapers should?
WhitesCreek
WhitesCreek
"Why didn't McElroy let
"Why didn't McElroy let others take the commission to task, and cover the action from the sidelines, like newspapers should?"
I'm not Jack McElroy's confidante, so I cannot tell you what's in his head, but here's what it looks like to me:
Who are those "others" who can take the commission to task?
Of course, they can talk amongst themselves about upcoming issues. What they can't do in private is deliberate toward a decision -- like, say, make it possible for Chuck Bolus to magically appear on the dais all signed, sealed and ready to deliver the tie-breaking vote that made Lee Tramel a county commissioner (and one of the best-compensated double-dippers in these part).
The arrogance displayed by te majority of Knox County Commission at the January 31 meeting exceeded the limits of decency. Not only did they break the law that requires deliberation is to be done in public, they behaved like schoolyard bullies while they openly flouted that law and essentially dared someone/anyone to do something about it. The News-Sentinel is one of a handful of entities that has the wherewithal to take the challenge.
I believe McElroy sees his job as a public trust, and filing this lawsuit is a way of keeping that trust. An expensive way, at that -- I doubt he (and his corporate superiors) really wanted to spend all this money. And remember -- it was the newspaper that offered to settle this fight out of court, and it was the commission that declined that offer.
What you are suggesting, hoseman, is business as usual.
Who are the other 9 citizens
Who are the other 9 citizens that are in on this lawsuit?
And I am not suggesting business as usual. The meeting on Jan 31 was a big, steaming pile of manure. And what happened prior to that meeting was even worse. I ran into a term-limited commissioner who told me who his replacement was, and that was well before 1/31. Personally, I think the law should be changed. Replacing one commissioner that way may be acceptable, but more than one should involve an election by the people.
Reporters and newspapers have a public duty to report the truth, without bias. When the editor of a newspaper is the plantiff, the reporting is going to have a slant to it. You can't argue one way in court, and then report otherwise in a public forum. I am not arguing the merits of the case, as a matter of fact, I think the whole thing is a waste of time. I think the most the court can do is a "do-over". Big deal. They will simply repeat Jan 31.
Has anyone thought about what would happen if the commission won? If we think Jan 31 was bad, we haven't seen anything yet.
win, lose or draw
we're all better off knowing. If it takes a trial to get our attention, so be it! And it took the outrageous behavior of a few dim bulbs and 12 new appointments at once to really be newsworthy - finally.
Who is qualified for office???
Qualifications for office of county commissioner:
18 years old, resident, registered to vote.
(The state constitution disqualifies clergy, atheists, and duelists as representatives!)
Perhaps it's time to expect more from our County Commission:
They are responsible for Schools - they should at least be educated!
They are responsible for the Sheriff (I may have that backwards)- they should at least be law-abiding citizens without a criminal record.
"They are responsible for
"They are responsible for Schools - they should at least be educated!
They are responsible for the Sheriff (I may have that backwards)- they should at least be law-abiding citizens without a criminal record."
I agree completely. I will go one further.
How about that they not be able to sit on boards of non profits(seeking county govt. grants) and be a commissioner at the same time?
Mr. Mc Beavy
I will do you one more Mr. McBeavy... how about you can only collect one pay check from county government... be it commission, teacher, sheriff, street cleaner or what ever... one knox count pay check per employee period...
By the way Mr. McBeavy can you still make smoke come out your ears like you did on the Andy Griffith show???
"By the way Mr. McBeavy can
"By the way Mr. McBeavy can you still make smoke come out your ears like you did on the Andy Griffith show???"
Sure can. But only when I see Ragsdale crying on TV about spending too much time reading to "our children."
Can you still make those "profits" and have those "investors" wanting to "invest" with you like you used too?
Mr. McBeavy - Huh
Mr. McBeavy... Huh...