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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Memphians Predominate in Quest for State Appellate Vacancies

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Several Memphis jurists and a few just plain lawyers are seeking a change of venue as of Thursday, the deadline for applications for two state appellate court openings.

The openings were created when state Supreme Court Justice Janice M. Holder informed Governor Bill Haslam that she would not seek reelection when her term ends on August 31 of next year, and Judge David R. Farmer informed the governor similarly about his seat on the Court of Appeals, Western Division.

SUPREME COURT: All but one of the five applicants for Holder’s Supreme Court position are Memphians, as is Holder. They are:

Criminal Court Judge Chris Craft
Judge Holly Kirby, Court of Appeals, Western Section
John Brook Lathram of the Bass, Berry, and Sims law firm
Steve Mulroy, Shelby County Commissioner and University of Memphis law professor

The position is also sought by:

William Lewis Jenkins Jr., of the Dyersburg law firm Wilkerson Gauldin Hayes Jenkins & Dedmon

COURT OF APPEALS, WESTERN SECTION: Four of the six applicants are Memphians. They are:

Chancellor Kenny Armstrong
Frank S. Cantrell, deputy director of Memphis Area Legal Services
Rhynette Northcross Hurd, mediator and co-founder of the Ridder, Hurd firm
Dorothy J. Pounders, managing member of the Pounders, Coleman firm

There are two applicants from Jackson:

Brandon LK. Gipson, partner of the Pentecost and Gipson firm
Attorney Edward L. Martindale

The Governor’s Commission on Judicial Appointments will meet November 12 in Jackson to interview candidates for the Court of Appeals position and hear public comments. The Commission will then meet in Nashville on November 13 for the same purpose in regard to the Supreme Court candidates.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Federal Judge Rules: District 91 Candidate Tomasik Can Run as Libertarian

Libertarian Jim Tomasik

  • Libertarian Jim Tomasik

NASHVILLE — Federal Judge William J. Haynes, Jr., chief judge of the Middle Tennessee district, ruled Thursday that the Shelby County Election Commission must list Jim Tomasik as a Libertarian Party candidate on the special election ballots for state House District 91 — not, as had previously been the case in preliminary listings, as an independent.

The special election, which is scheduled for November 21, with early voting in effect from Friday, November 1, though Saturday, November 16, will pit Tomasik against Ramesh Akbari, who won the Democratic nomination for the seat in a special primary election on October 8. The election is to determine a successor to the late Lois DeBerry.

In view of the closeness of the general election date, lawyers for Tomasik had sought an emergency injunction from Judge Haynes, who, after hearing arguments at a hearing Thursday, issued it from the bench.

In making his ruling, Judge Haynes noted that in February 2012 he had already ruled unconstitutional provisions of Tennessee’s pre-existing ballot access law, which had allowed automatic ballot access only for Democratic and Republican candidates, requiring “minor” parties to meet standards for ballot access which he considered prohibitively difficult.

That ruling was in response to a joint suit by the Green Party and Constitutional Party, who were faced with a requirement to present roughly 40,000 signatures on petitions to gain state ballot access. That figure, representing 2.5 percent of the votes cast in the previous gubernatorial election, was coupled with early deadlines and with requirements that petitioners be members of the affected parties

The offices state Election Coordinator Mark Goins and Secretary of State Tre Hargett were the defendants in 2012 and in Libertarian Tomasik’s case as well. The state has appealed Haynes 2012 ruling.

Meanwhile, efforts have been underway in the General Assembly to reform the state’s ballot access law. State Senator Jim Kyle (D-Memphis) filed SB 1091 in the 2013 legislative session, which would require milder requirements for minor parties to gain ballot access — 250 petitioners in the case of state Senate or state House elections.

The bill was bottled up in the state and local committees of both legislative chambers, but a 9-member study commission on ballot access was created, with Kyle as the sole Democrat among six legislative members. One member each from the Green, Libertarian, and Constitutional parties filled out the commission’s membership.

Kyle said that Senator Ken Yager (R, Harriman, chairman of the House state and local committee and ad hoc chair of the commission, had canceled a meeting of the commission that had been scheduled for mid-October. That was about the time that Tomasik filed his suit.

Prior to Thursday’s hearing and Judge Haynes’ ruling, Kyle had welcomed the hearing as a test case for ballot-access reform. The Memphis Democrat, chairman of the Senate Democratic caucus, said Jason Huff of his staff had done a study indicating that both the state and the nation were subject to cycles of party realignment which recurred roughly every 70 years and that the political ferment for such a moment was at hand.

Kyle also suggested that sates with elected secretaries of state had proved most amenable to ballot-access reform and that perhaps Tennessee should transition to a method of popular election for its secretary of state.

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News

Ashe to Amen

Eileen Townsend surveys the provocative show at the Dixon, Ashe to Amen: African Americans and Biblical Imagery.

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News

City Council Working on Rules Changes

Toby Sells reports that the City Council is making progress on rules changes to control members’ behavior.

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News News Blog

Memphis City Council Rules Committee Still Working on ‘Easy Stuff’

Leaders of the various Memphis City Council committees will rotate each year if the full council approves a proposal from the ad hoc group of council members looking to change the rules and procedures of the city’s legislative body.

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The proposal was approved by the committee created last month to rein in some behaviors from council members and change how the council conducts business. Councilman Myron Lowery brought the proposal to the table in the committee’s meeting Thursday afternoon.

“Some people believe they own a committee because they have chaired them for two or three years,” Lowery said.

Councilman Bill Boyd countered that the years spent chairing a committee bring an expertise on a topic which “serves the whole council.” But that expertise can be problematic, said Councilwoman Wanda Halbert, as some “start acting like members of the administration and not legislators.”

The committee also approved a “fiscal consent” category for the council’s agenda that will allow some routine spending items to pass more quickly through the council approval process.

The committee said it will also enforce the Thursday deadline for submitting agenda items for the following Tuesday’s council meeting. Halbert said she is “uncomfortable” voting on items that she has not time to consider and said the rule is frequently broken by members of A C Wharton’s administration.

The committee also discussed creating uniform procedures for limiting speaking times for council members and members of the public and discussed policies on council members leaving meetings early.

While neither meeting of the committee have yet produced the fireworks some expected, Halbert said she wanted the committee to deal with “the easy stuff” first.

“We have stuff coming that might be a little funny looking and a little sensitive,” she said.

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News News Blog

Money Flows for Memphis Road Projects

Projects to repair and maintain Memphis roads and bridges will soon get big cash injections if the Memphis City Council approves them during their meeting Tuesday night.

The council will consider:

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– Accepting more than $5.5 million in state and federal dollars to fund the next phase of the project to clean up and revitalize the area around Elvis Presley Boulevard and Brooks Road. The $40.9 million project will include improvements to roads, sidewalks, signage, traffic lights, and more and is expected to be complete by 2016.

– Accepting $5.3 million in state and federal funds to repair 14 bridges on Sam Cooper Boulevard.

– Accepting $11.6 million in funds to pave some Memphis roads.

– Accepting nearly $9 million in funds to improve traffic signals around the city.

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Local Film Fans Applaud Brutal Police Attack on Annoying Cell Phone Performance Artist

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Midtown— “It was chaos, absolute chaos,” Indie Memphis Film Festival volunteer Ginger Grant said, breathlessly describing an altercation that took place after she called in a complaint about Dorf Ungolf, a Norwegian performance artist known for making loud phone calls during movies and live theatrical productions. Ungolf, who has been banned from all area cinemas, was attempting to purchase an all-access pass to the popular festival.

“I asked him to leave but he wouldn’t,” Grant further explained. “I called the police but the team they sent looked more like a military unit. They had body armor, and all kinds of weapons, and they just started pounding him. It was awful. It was amazing.”

Regional cinemas had been on high alert since Ungolf posted a message on Facebook explaining how he had been “inspired and empowered” by the “rich white people” in a new series of online advertisements for the Motorola Droid Ultra. He said he applauded the telecommunications company for encouraging “sexy rich people” to flirt electronically at “shitty fat people operas.”

“Once these deviant phone behaviors were ascribed only to the poor and powerless — to the gang bangers, and the Norwegians like me,” Ungolf wrote. “Now that we see that hot wealthy American white people in tuxedos are also enjoying these same wicked pleasures there is no turning back.”

In various interviews Ungolf has claimed that the people of Norway didn’t appreciate his art either and that he moved to Tennessee after the opening of a 22 screen Muvico megaplex in Downtown Memphis. He has been annoying the shit out of regional cinema and live theater fans since. In fact, he has often been blamed for the now-shuttered Muvico’s ultimate demise.

“People always fear the new,” Ungolf was quoted as saying in August, 2007 after being dragged from the Muvico-22 by the MPD’s Gang Unit.

“If only these stupid cow-faced audiences would listen they would know I am not talking to friends. I am not hooking up to say ‘Yo-yo man, whazzup’ like you see on TV. I am responding in the moment to what is actually happening on the screen. If it is an asshole up there I may say, ‘Look at that asshole up there, who does he think he is?’ And sometimes I am then responding to people who are responding to me. And it is beautiful.”

According to police reports Ungolf was removed from the theater when two Muvico customers who were trying to watch Transformers complained that there was a man behind them who was even louder than a Michael Bay movie, taking selfies and making frequent attempts to contact his drug dealer to obtain marijuana.

Eyewitnesses to Ungolf’s recent arrest say the crowd that assembled at Playhouse on the Square to watch police officers mercilessly brutalize the artist was both large and enthusiastic.

“They were all chanting, ‘Kill him, kill him,” Grant remembered. “I can’t remember who started it,” she added, conspicuously crossing her fingers.

“Best show I’ve seen all year,” community actor Giles Hamm said, after expressing some concerns about the use of excessive force. “That guy who talks through movies was just screaming and asking, ‘where is your freedom of speech now fat opera people? Where is it now?’ And that’s when somebody would hit him in the face again or shoot him with a TASER. You can’t script this stuff.

“I’ve got to admit, I have been concerned about what looks like an epidemic of police brutality in America,” Hamm added. “But this time they were going after somebody who deserved it. They were just kicking the absolute crap out of somebody who I personally hate, and who everybody hates. That kind of thing always brings people together.”

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Sound Advice: Sin City Scoundrels Thursday at the Cove

Dude has an acoustic bass. That’s a sin we can live with.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Reports: Griz sign Pondexter to 4-year extension

Quincy Pondexter earned himself four more years in Beale Street Blue, according to reports.

  • Larry Kuzniewski
  • Quincy Pondexter earned himself four more years in Beale Street Blue, according to reports.

More information has come across the Twitter transom today about a contract extension for Griz wing Quincy Pondexter—the extension that was reportedly “unlikely” just last week. First was this report last night from the Commercial Appeal‘s Ron Tillery:

Later this morning, Chris Haynes of Comcast SportsNet NW reported in a tweet that the deal to which Pondexter has been signed is for 4 years, $14 million. If that’s the case, that’s somewhat less than Pondexter was widely anticipated to sign for. Most estimates had the deal being for at least two or three million more.

The extension of Pondexter comes on the heels of his great showing in last year’s Western Conference Finals, and his continued development coming into the preseason this year. It’s clear that Pondexter still hasn’t reached the ceiling of his game, and has room to improve even more over the next four years. And, if not, this contract is certainly a good deal for the Grizzlies, and it’s not likely to cause any salary cap issues going forward.

As for Davis, I think it’s safe to say that the Grizzlies haven’t seen enough from him yet this season—preseason games and one real game in which he played eight minutes—to know whether they wanted to commit to him at whatever price his representatives were asking. If Davis has a great year, that will turn out to be bad for the Grizzlies’ hopes of keeping him. If he doesn’t, it’ll probably turn out to have been the right call.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Halloween Jam: Disco Werewolf

It’s pretty scary. Just to be safe, check yourself into that abandoned college in Holly Springs before you listen to this Halloween Jam from Clay Otis and and the Dream Sheiks.

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