Special prosecutor asks Ohio Supreme Court to suspend Cincinnati City Councilman Wendell Young
A special prosecutor asked the Ohio Supreme Court earlier this week to initiate suspension proceedings against Cincinnati City Councilman Wendell Young following his felony indictment. By Jennifer Edwards Baker | May 12, 2021 at 2:22 PM EDT - Updated May 12 at 5:15 PM
CINCINNATI (FOX19) - A special prosecutor tells FOX19 NOW he has asked the Ohio Supreme Court to initiate suspension proceedings against Cincinnati City Councilman Wendell Young following his felony indictment.
âYou have an elected official who committed a felony. Itâs just appropriate he be suspended,â Patrick Hanley told FOX19 NOW last month when he first told us he planned to seek the suspension.
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The Dover faces three felony charges. (Renee Schiavone/Patch)
OHIO A Dover man suspected of trying to pay a woman and her underage daughter for sex was arrested Saturday in Columbiana County, according to authorities.
The man, 44-year-old Chad Robert Ryan, was arrested after an investigation by the Mahoning Valley Human Trafficking Task Force found he intended to pay the woman and minor for sex, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost said in a news release.
He was charged with compelling prostitution, a third degree felony; attempted unlawful sexual conduct with a minor, a fourth degree felony; and possessing criminal tools, a fifth degree felony.
They are asking the court to block the Biden administration from enforcing the provision against their states West Virginia, Alabama, Arkansas, Alaska, Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota and Utah.
The request from the 13-state coalition mirrors others from the GOP attorneys general in Arizona, Missouri and Ohio, who have separately turned to courts in their states for relief. Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich said the interim final rule from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen does not address the constitutional issues he argues the measure presents, while Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge said the proposed regulations do not fix its unconstitutionality.
Ohio, Kentucky attorneys general among 44 asking Facebook to abandon Instagram for kids Share Updated: 11:28 PM EDT May 11, 2021 Share Updated: 11:28 PM EDT May 11, 2021
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Show Transcript HOPING TO STOP THIS PLANS. FOR GROWING BOY LIKE LITTLE WESLEY PLAY DATES AT DARK ARE AS GOOD AS IT GETS? OH THAT WAS. VERY MOM IS ALWAYS KEEPING CLOSE WATCH BUT IN A FEW YEARS CAROLINE KEY. NO, SHE’LL HAVE TO PROTECT HER SON FROM DANGEROUS SCENE AND UNSEEN IT. CERTAINLY HE’S GONNA BE NATIVE TO ALL DIGITAL THINGS AS HE GROWS UP. HE KNOWS HOW TO NAVIGATE HIS IPAD AND YOUTUBE SO IT’S GONNA COME ALL TOO QUICKLY. SHE WONDERS HOW THE CONSTANTLY EVOLVING DIGITAL SPACE WILL INFLUENCE HER LITTLE BOY, PROBABLY MORE OFTEN, I THINK ABOUT STUPID MISTAKES THAT YOU MAKE THAT THEN ARE GOING TO LIVE WITH YOU FOREVER, AND THEY WILL BE VISIBLE TO ALL YOUR FUTURE EMPLOYERS. SHE HOPES TO KEEP HIM OFF SOCIAL MEDIA UNTIL HE’S A TEENAGER MORE APPS ARE LAUNCHING TH