Across Ohio, law enforcement officials are misusing a law meant for victims to shield the names of police officers involved ...
Marion Police Chief Jay McDonald, president of the Ohio Fraternal Order of Police, agreed with Bosch and said that voters ...
The Ohio Supreme Court heard oral arguments Tuesday from lawyers representing the Columbus Dispatch and the Columbus Division ...
They're arguing it's all because a law called Marsy's Law, which protects victims of a crime, but it's now being used by police to conceal the identity of officers. “We are asking this court to ...
The Marsy’s Law for All national campaign for the expansion of victims’ rights is an exercise in constitutional experimentation. But because it thrives on emotional manipulation, it has ...
Should the officers in that scenario be granted the same privacy considerations granted to civilian crime victims by Marsy’s Law, a constitutional amendment passed by voters in 2017? That’s ...
The Ohio Supreme Court heard oral arguments Tuesday about Marsy's Law, which shields names of law enforcement officers from public disclosure if they are deemed a victim of a crime. The Columbus ...
Police agencies across Ohio have used Marsy's Law, a voter-approved constitutional amendment to protect crime victims, as grounds for not disclosing the names of officers involved in fatal ...
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