making local government more ethical

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Robert Wechsler
One thing that keeps striking me about the recent decisions in the legislative immunity cases relating to government ethics is how little they attempt to distinguish cases outside the ethics field from these cases in the ethics field.

Is government ethics no different from criminal prosecution, no different from civil suits?

Robert Wechsler
Here's a short opinion piece by Walter Dellinger, head of the Office of Legal Counsel under Pres. Clinton. It's part of a series of such pieces that will appear in tomorrow's Washington Post. The opinions concern what Pres. Obama should be looking for in his first Supreme Court nominee. After Dellinger's opinion piece, I tie his ideas into...
Robert Wechsler
Last month, I wrote about problems involving municipal bond sales and advice in Tennessee. Yesterday, the state comptroller wrote a guest column explaining what went wrong with municipal bonds and suggesting some of what he will propose today to prevent such problems in the future.

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Robert Wechsler
Two days ago, I wrote about a Chicago Heights (IL) situation where two council members who work under a third council member were in a position to vote for their boss to be the city's mayor. A suit brought by a group of local ministers to prevent this from happening was dismissed, according to an article in...
Robert Wechsler
I listened yesterday to the testimony of Kevin Powers, a member of the Nevada Legislative Counsel's office, to the House Committee considering the legislative immunity amendment I discussed in yesterday's blog post. He was very impressive, with all the facts and laws at his fingertips. But his defense and explanations fell short of convincing me (but apparently not the legislators) that the amendment is appropriate.

Robert Wechsler
The Nevada legislature is really going out of its way to make sure that its members, and no one else in the state, is protected by legislative immunity with respect to the state ethics commission. For a body that was afraid, without a court's blessing, to exclude its members from the state ethics commission's jurisdiction (to the extent a member is involved in legislative activity), it does not seem afraid, even before the appellate opinion in its legislative immunity case has been published,...

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