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	<title>ben dusing &#8211; Cincy Link</title>
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		<title>Pastor, Sittenfeld to collect full salaries despite bribery charges</title>
		<link>https://cincylink.com/2021/11/19/pastor-sittenfeld-to-collect-full-salaries-despite-bribery-charges/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 19 Nov 2021 05:08:41 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Cincy News]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[CINCINNATI — Cincinnati taxpayers will likely spend more than $152,000 on the salaries and health insurance for suspended City Council members Jeff Pastor and PG Sittenfeld through the end of this year, while both await trial on corruption charges. State law allows Pastor and Sittenfeld, whom the FBI arrested following separate grand jury indictments last &#8230;]]></description>
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<p>CINCINNATI — Cincinnati taxpayers will likely spend more than $152,000 on the salaries and health insurance for suspended City Council members Jeff Pastor and PG Sittenfeld through the end of this year, while both await trial on corruption charges.</p>
<p>State law allows Pastor and Sittenfeld, whom the FBI arrested following separate grand jury indictments last November, to collect full salaries until their cases are resolved in court or their council terms expire on Jan. 3, 2022.</p>
<p>“The bottom line for Cincinnati voters is they’re paying for nothing right now,” said University of Cincinnati political science professor David Niven. “They’re paying for our commitment to justice, which doesn’t tangibly get them anything in terms of work from two employees of the people.”</p>
<figure class="Figure" itemscope="" itemtype="https://schema.org/ImageObject">
<div class="Figure-container">
<p>Eric Clajus </p>
</div><figcaption class="Figure-caption" itemprop="caption">PG Sittenfeld walks to U.S. District Court with attorneys Charles H. Rittgers and Charlie M. Rittgers</figcaption></figure>
<p>The city also pays for the salaries and health benefits of the two interim council members who temporarily replaced Pastor and Sittenfeld – Steve Goodin and Liz Keating through the end of the year.</p>
<p>In November voters elected Keating to keep her seat on council. She will be returning to her own seat in January. Voters did not elect Goodin.</p>
<p>“It is a lot of money,” Niven said. “It’s a burden on Cincinnati to be paying for two extra council members who literally can’t do anything.”</p>
<p>The city pays council members $5,054 per month and contributes an additional $483 per month to those who have a family health insurance plan. That amounts to $11,074 per month, or $132,891 per year, combined paid to two council members who each have family insurance plans.</p>
<p>Taxpayers also paid Sittenfeld and Pastor’s salary for more than six weeks in late 2020 after their arrests.</p>
<figure class="Figure" itemscope="" itemtype="https://schema.org/ImageObject">
<div class="Figure-container">
            <img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://cdn.cincylink.com/pub/content/uploads/sites/27/2021/11/1637281625_820_Pastor-Sittenfeld-to-collect-full-salaries-despite-bribery-charges.png" alt="Attorney Ben Dusing and suspended City Councilman Jeff Pastor. " width="1280" height="695"/></p>
<p>Lot Tan </p>
</div><figcaption class="Figure-caption" itemprop="caption">Attorney Ben Dusing and suspended City Councilman Jeff Pastor.</figcaption></figure>
<p>Last year the FBI arrested Pastor on Nov. 10, 2020 and then Sittenfeld on Nov. 19 for allegedly taking thousands in bribes from developers in unrelated cases.</p>
<p>Days after Pastor and Sittenfeld’s arrests, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost announced he would initiate suspension proceedings against them with the Ohio Supreme Court.</p>
<p>Several council members and Mayor John Cranley called on Pastor and Sittenfeld to resign. Instead, both voluntarily agreed to be suspended, which means they keep receiving paychecks.</p>
<p>“You’re innocent until proven guilty. I think they both stepped away from council so it wouldn’t taint the future decisions,” said Sean Comer, Xavier University’s director of government relations.</p>
<figure class="Figure" itemscope="" itemtype="https://schema.org/ImageObject">
<div class="Figure-container">
            <img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://cdn.cincylink.com/pub/content/uploads/sites/27/2021/11/Pastor-Sittenfeld-to-collect-full-salaries-despite-bribery-charges.jpeg" alt="Tamaya Dennard fed court.jpeg" width="1280" height="718"/></p>
<p>WCPO file</p>
</div><figcaption class="Figure-caption" itemprop="caption">Former Cincinnati City Councilwoman Tamaya Dennard stands outside Downtown's federal courthouse, summer 2020.</figcaption></figure>
<p>But taxpayers may see it for what it is: they have been paying double for two council seats for more than a year.</p>
<p>“Is it fair to taxpayers? Nobody is going to say yes,” Comer said. “Nobody wants their money to go to somebody who is corrupt, who they think has done something illegal.”</p>
<p>Pastor’s attorney, Ben Dusing, said it’s only fair that he keeps getting paid while he awaits trial, which is set for May 2, 2022 in U.S. District Court.</p>
<p>“Given that Mr. Pastor was forcibly displaced from counsel and, if proven innocent, well thank goodness that the law afforded for his continued provision for his family,” Dusing said.</p>
<p>Sittenfeld has been adamant since his arrest that he will fight the charges at trial, which is set for June 20, 2022. Both men will face trial with separate judges and separate juries.</p>
<figure class="Figure" itemscope="" itemtype="https://schema.org/ImageObject">
<div class="Figure-container">
            <img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://cdn.cincylink.com/pub/content/uploads/sites/27/2021/11/Pastor-Sittenfeld-to-collect-full-salaries-despite-bribery-charges.jpg" alt="Disappointment, not hope, drives young voters" width="640" height="427"/></p>
<p>Phil Didion</p>
</div><figcaption class="Figure-caption" itemprop="caption">
<p>The University of Cincinnati's Professor David Niven discusses the upcoming Presidential election with his class on Monday Oct. 31, 2016. Phil Didion | WCPO Contributor</p>
</figcaption></figure>
<p>“PG is innocent and for nearly ten years he served the people of Cincinnati faithfully,” said Sittenfeld’s attorney, Charlie Rittgers. “He is fighting the unfounded charges - and the presumption of innocence is another fairness which the people have said he deserves, just as each of them does.”</p>
<p>The corruption scandal at City Hall began in February 2020 when the FBI arrested former Councilwoman Tamaya Dennard.</p>
<p>A week after her arrest, Dennard resigned, so her city paychecks stopped.</p>
<p>“She resigned, she didn’t take a suspension,” Niven said. “She didn’t take the salary because I don’t think she saw a path forward that would exonerate her.”</p>
<p>She is serving an 18-month prison term after pleading guilty to honest services wire fraud, admitting that she took $15,000 for her vote on a development deal at The Banks.</p>
<p>“Pastor and Sittenfeld are in very different situations (than Dennard) even though they are charged with similar crimes, the details are very, very different,” Niven said.</p>
<p>Due to the complexity of their cases, and the backlog of cases in the federal court system due to COVID, legal experts say it was obvious that any trial for Pastor and Sittenfeld would be more than a year away. And long after their terms on council had expired.</p>
<p>“Certainly, you could make a case that once it was obvious that their case was not going to be set until well after their time on council, that there was a moment that they could have said, ‘I should just resign. I should not continue to collect a check for something that I’m not doing, that I can’t do,’” Comer said.</p>
<p>What could the city spend $152,000 on if it weren’t paying for two extra salaries?</p>
<ul>
<li>Hire one and a half new police officers or firefighters.</li>
<li>Hire nearly two new health center nurses.</li>
<li>Pay 71 percent of the cost of a new garbage packer truck.</li>
<li>Buy one and a half snowplows</li>
<li>Purchase at least three police cruisers</li>
<li>Add more than 500 pedestrian road signs</li>
<li>Complete 69 new painted cross walks each with two curb ramps</li>
</ul>
<figure class="Figure" itemscope="" itemtype="https://schema.org/ImageObject">
<div class="Figure-container">
            <img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://cdn.cincylink.com/pub/content/uploads/sites/27/2021/11/1637281625_299_Pastor-Sittenfeld-to-collect-full-salaries-despite-bribery-charges.jpg" alt="What could the city spend $152,000 on if it weren’t paying for two extra salaries?&#13;&#10;Hire one and a half new police officers or firefighters.&#13;&#10;Hire nearly two new health center nurses.&#13;&#10;Pay 71 percent of the cost of a new garbage packer truck.&#13;&#10;Buy one and a half snowplows&#13;&#10;Purchase at least three police cruisers&#13;&#10;Add more than 500 pedestrian road signs&#13;&#10;Complete 69 new painted cross walks each with two curb ramps" width="1280" height="720"/></p>
<p>WCPO</p>
</div><figcaption class="Figure-caption" itemprop="caption">What could the city spend $152,000 on if it weren’t paying for two extra salaries?</figcaption></figure>
<p>In the city’s most recent capital budget, council voted to spend relatively the same amount as Pastor and Sittenfeld’s salaries on:</p>
<ul>
<li>$168,000 Gas light repair and replacements.</li>
<li> $150,000 Real Time Crime Center camera program.</li>
<li>$125,000 Parking meter replacement.</li>
<li>$125,000 Health center facilities and repairs.</li>
<li>$150,000 Paddock Road safety improvements.</li>
</ul>
<p>If Pastor and Sittenfeld are convicted, the city could go to court to recoup the salaries it paid to them over the past year. But it’s likely a judge will also order both men to pay restitution as part of their sentencing, as was done with Dennard. Which means they may not have enough money to repay city taxpayers for those paychecks if convicted, Niven said.</p>
<p>Despite that, Niven said it is still symbolically important for the city to try to recoup those salaries, if either Sittenfeld or Pastor is convicted</p>
<p>Pastor will face a jury with<b> </b>his co-defendant Tyran Marshall, who is accused of funneling bribes to Pastor through an LLC. The FBI arrested Pastor last November on charges that he took $55,000 in bribes from two developers during his first term on council.</p>
<figure class="Figure" itemscope="" itemtype="https://schema.org/ImageObject">
<div class="Figure-container">
            <img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://cdn.cincylink.com/pub/content/uploads/sites/27/2021/11/1637281626_432_Pastor-Sittenfeld-to-collect-full-salaries-despite-bribery-charges.png" alt="Cincinnati City Council candidates find a packed field for nine open seats.png" width="1280" height="720"/></p>
<p>WCPO Staff</p>
</div>
</figure>
<p>In Sittenfeld’s case, the FBI alleges that he promised to deliver council votes supporting a development deal at the former Convention Place Mall in exchange for four $5,000 contributions to his political action fund. Sittenfeld allegedly accepted four more checks in fall 2019 for a total of $40,000 in bribes.</p>
<p>These back-to-back trial in May and June will be “challenging and painful,” for the city, Comer said, because so many political consultants, staffers, donors, and developers could be called to testify.</p>
<p>“A defense is not only going to call in every political figure in Cincinnati, at least symbolically, for their part in this,” Niven said. “It’s going to call in every donor, everybody who had business with the city, and every intermediary, campaign staff, consultant and hangar-on.”</p>
<p>“The main defense here is going to be - this is how politics works,” Niven said.</p>
</div>
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		<title>Sick Campbell County inmate&#8217;s loved ones finally know where he is</title>
		<link>https://cincylink.com/2021/08/18/sick-campbell-county-inmates-loved-ones-finally-know-where-he-is/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Aug 2021 04:48:12 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[A critically ill inmate at the Campbell County Jail has been granted conditional release — a move that allows his family, for the first time in almost a month, to receive updates on his condition. The news they’re getting is worrying. Pierre Taylor is in a medically induced coma, and his release was granted “for &#8230;]]></description>
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<p>A critically ill inmate at the Campbell County Jail has been granted conditional release — a move that allows his family, for the first time in almost a month, to receive updates on his condition.</p>
<p>The news they’re getting is worrying. Pierre Taylor is in a medically induced coma, and his release was granted “for end-of-life medical reasons,” according to court documents. Knowing that is still better than weeks of nothing.</p>
<p>“Getting direct updates now is just a complete relief,” said fiancee Dajah Bishop, who spent much of January hunting for information about Taylor’s well-being. “We are just working together just to make sure that he knows he is loved by so many in his community and his family.”</p>
<p><b>FROM JANUARY: 'No one knows where he is': Hospitalized inmate's family fights for answers</b></p>
<p>Taylor, 38, caught COVID-19 at the jail in early January and quickly slipped out of reach for Bishop, his daughter and even his attorney. For weeks, their search for answers produced only dead ends and outdated information. </p>
<p>No one could tell them how sick he was. No one could tell them where he was being treated.</p>
<p>They might not have known he was hospitalized at all without a phone call from another inmate.</p>
<p>“Nobody wants to be fearful every second of the day, just being concerned about a loved one that is incarcerated and not understanding and knowing what they are going through,” Bishop said.</p>
<p>She and Taylor’s attorney, Ben Dusing, spoke to WCPO on Jan. 26. Shortly afterward, U.S. Marshals told Dusing he could file a motion to have Taylor released on conditional bond, which would allow his loved ones to visit him virtually and get updates on his status in the hospital.</p>
<p>Judge David L. Bunning granted the motion soon after it was filed.</p>
<p>“He used the word ‘compassion,’” Dusing said. “There was also legal grounding for it. He wasn't overriding the law, but the relief that I saw was the type of relief that would have never been granted in a typical situation but for the medical circumstances.”</p>
<p>The news Taylor’s circle received when it was granted was harrowing: At one point, while they struggled for information, he had been given 12 hours to live. He survived but remains in a coma.</p>
<p>The motion granting Taylor’s conditional release limits the number of people who can receive updates on his condition and conduct virtual visits with him. If he regains consciousness and his health improves, he could return to jail. Still, Dusing said, it was an important and extraordinary recognition of Taylor’s humanity.</p>
<p>“It’s an institutional failure,” he said of the original information blackout. “You can’t really blame the Marshals. They have to follow the rules. It’s an instance of people kind of putting humanity in substance over form. … We have to rely upon good old-fashioned things like kindness, humanity, compassion, and just a sense of solidarity and collectivization of these governmental actors where we haven’t in the past.”</p>
<p>And despite the fact that she’s now got access to the most important information about Taylor’s health, Bishop doesn’t know what’s next. She said she’s proud of herself for fighting as hard as she could on his behalf, and she wants to encourage other inmates’ families to do the same.</p>
<p>“There just needs to be more compassion around the board, but at the same time, for your family, go hard,” she said. “Go as hard as you can until you find out what is going on.”</p>
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<br /><a href="https://www.wcpo.com/news/coronavirus/for-your-family-go-hard-sick-campbell-county-inmates-family-finally-knows-where-he-is">Source link </a></p>
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