Wednesday, July 30, 2014
State and Local Stories
The corruption trial for ex-Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell and his wife plunged Tuesday into the sordid details of the couple’s marriage and the former first lady’s “crush” on a businessman who, according to prosecutors, lavished them with gifts and cash in exchange for promoting his company. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jessica Aber said during opening statements that McDonnell and his wife betrayed the public’s trust by lining their pockets with “secret gifts and cash.” McDonnell, a once-rising star in the Republican party who left office in January, had a duty “not to sell the power and influence of his office to the highest bidder,” Aber said. “Mr. and Mrs. McDonnell knew what Mr. Williams wanted and gave it to him,” she said. Attorneys for the McDonnells told jurors the governor did what any of his predecessors would do for a Virginia-based company. They questioned Williams’ character and said the couple couldn’t have been scheming together because their marriage was falling apart. Maureen McDonnell’s lawyer, William A. Burck, said the former first lady was “duped” by Williams into thinking he cared for her.
Free Lance-Star
http://www.freelancestar.com/2014-07-30/articles/41725/exgovernors-corruption-trial-focuses-on-marriage/
A drafted “statement of expectations” scheduled for discussion Wednesday would limit public dissent by members of the Board of Visitors at the University of Virginia. A special committee of the board is slated to meet in Richmond to discuss the draft proposal, which outlines a sort of “code of conduct” for board members. Among other things, the document calls for board members to bring up dissenting opinions in open meeting, but to let them go after a vote has been taken. Parts of the text specifically try to avoid pitfalls encountered by the University of Texas at Austin, where a division between President Bill Powers and UT System Regent Wallace L. Hall has turned into a public feud. Among other things, Hall is accused of using excessive public records requests — consisting of thousands of pages of documents — to obstruct university administration. The UVa proposal calls for board members to channel their requests through a committee head or top-ranking administrator. “Requests by individual Visitors for institutional data should be rare,” reads the statement.
Daily Progress
http://www.dailyprogress.com/news/draft-uva-board-document-would-curb-visitors-outside-dissent/article_6f91b368-1790-11e4-8c15-0017a43b2370.html
The prosecution in a cigarette trafficking case is planning to propose an order that the next courtroom hearing scheduled for Aug. 6 in Shenandoah County Circuit Court be closed to the press and the rest of the public. Attempts to conduct courtroom hearings behind closed doors are a rarity in adult criminal cases, but Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Louis Campola said he intended to write up such an order subject to approval by Circuit Judge Dennis L. Hupp. "We're closing the hearing," Campola said in a brief interview Tuesday. Asked what he planned to cite as his reason for closing the hearing, Campola replied, "We're just closing the hearing."
Northern Virginia Daily
http://www.nvdaily.com/news/2014/07/prosecution-seeks-to-close-cigarette-trafficking-hearing.php
Newport News’ Information Technology department is responsible for fixing city employees' computers and police radios when they break, but also plays a major role to make sure the traffic lights are scheduled properly, streets are repaired, trash is picked up, voters are registered and other vital city services are completed. To do all that, the department's budget has grown to $8.3 million for the 2015 fiscal year, which began this month. The department's budget was increased by $344,081 from the previous fiscal year and is up by $921,418 from fiscal year 2013.
Daily Press
http://www.dailypress.com/news/newport-news/dp-nws-budget-item-nn-16-20140729,0,7471086.story
Appomattox is known for its history but town council is trying to bring its communication into today by using social media. Most of Tuesday’s town council meeting focused on a social media presentation from Hollie S. Cammarasana, Virginia Municipal League Insurance Program’s director of communications. Cammarasana was asked to present on social media by Claudia Puckette, the communications committee chair, so council and staff could learn how best to interact with town residents. “It really does build a sense of community, and that’s what social media is really about, along with being transparent and getting the right information out there,” she said. “Today, the public meeting is held pretty much 24/7/365 through social media,” she said. One example she gave is, in addition to broadcasting meetings on public access channels, upload them to YouTube and then send an e-blast with a link to the video.
News & Advance
http://www.newsadvance.com/news/local/appomattox-town-council-gets-crash-course-on-social-media/article_ca1939f6-1794-11e4-9419-001a4bcf6878.html
Manassas City Council member Ian Lovejoy has announced a new iPhone app for Manassas. In a news release, Lovejoy said the new “Your Manassas” app will “better coordinate citizen access to information about upcoming events, city dining and shopping options as well as improving access to city hall.” “I’m very excited to be able to bring this easy-to-use, common sense resource to our citizens,” Lovejoy said. The app is the first of its kind on Virginia, Lovejoy said, and is may be the only such app to combine information about contacting city hall with information about upcoming events and dining options.
InsideNOVA
http://www.insidenova.com/headlines/manassas-councilman-creates-new-iphone-app-for-city/article_98c870f8-16cf-11e4-88e3-0019bb2963f4.html
A former Virginia state employee pleaded guilty on Tuesday to taking more than $238,000 — money intended to fund educational programs on underage drinking — for himself and his friends. Steven Hammond Jr., 29, pleaded guilty to one count of theft from a program that receives federal funds. He faces up to 10 years in prison. In a statement of facts agreed upon by federal prosecutors and by Hammond, the former Virginia Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control employee admitted to writing 77 checks from his employer to his friends. He began writing the checks in 2009, six years after he started working for the department, and was caught during an internal audit in 2013.
Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/crime/former-virginia-state-employee-pleads-guilty-to-sending-funds-to-his-friends/2014/07/29/db70fd54-1741-11e4-85b6-c1451e622637_story.html?wprss=rss_local
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