Latest news with #Kauffman

Yahoo
6 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Berks officials turn over alleged election violations for investigation
Three allegations of potential finance campaign laws violations in Berks County have been turned over to authorities for investigation. At a meeting of the board of elections Thursday, members of the county legal team presented a total of five complaints stemming from the May 20 primary election. Three of the complaints involved candidates who failed to indicate who paid for campaign materials, one involved a letter that appears to have violated the silence period before an election and one involved a text message of unclear origin. Commissioner Christian Leinbach said that in his 18 years in the post he never remembers having to consider five election violation complaints at one time. 'This is not something that happens on a regular basis,' he said. 'If you look at all of these cases there can be no doubt that in some way, shape or form these alleged actions influence voters and that just should not be.' Commissioner Michael Rivera encouraged those who are considering running for office to know the laws outlining the process. He also suggested the Democratic and Republican committees in Berks include training for candidates. 'We want to make sure that candidates are running fair races and that candidates are educated about the process,' he said. 'Do your homework.' The first complaint involved a candidate running for a supervisor post in Alsace Township who failed to include a disclaimer on campaign signs revealing who paid for their production. First Assistant County Solicitor Cody Kauffman said election officials contacted the candidate to alert him of the violation and were told that he would take steps to remedy the situation. However, the office was never notified if he took appropriate action. Kauffman said this action is in direct violation of the finance campaign law and recommended the matter be turned over to the district attorney's office for further investigation. The board agreed, voting unanimously to forward the issue to law enforcement. The second complaint involved a candidate running to represent Washington Township on the board of supervisors who initially failed to include a disclaimer on campaign material sent to voters about who paid for its production. Election officials reached out to the candidate to make him aware of this violation and the candidate took action to fix the situation by posting a disclaimer on Facebook about who had paid for the materials. It was recommended the issue not be sent to the district attorney for further review. The board agreed, voting unanimously to throw out the complaint because the candidate made the effort to remedy the problem. The third complaint involved two candidates running for supervisor posts in Brecknock Township who failed to include a disclaimer on campaign materials revealing who paid for them and did not file the necessary campaign finance reports. Kauffman said after election officials contacted the candidates that they agreed to add disclaimers to campaign signs and file campaign finance reports. However, the candidates were later found to have handed out materials without the disclaimer following the warning from the county. He recommended the matter be turned over to the district attorney's office for further investigation. The board agreed, voting unanimously to forward the issue to law enforcement. The fourth complaint involved an open letter by a resident sent to voters in Robesonia that was critical of some candidates running for mayor and borough council. Kauffman said the letter could have violated the silence period that prohibits candidates, committees and parties acting on their behalf from placing an advertisement in the 120 hours before an election without giving sufficient notice to the opposing candidate. But since the letter was sent by a private citizen, Kauffman recommended the board drop the matter. The board agreed, voting unanimously not to forward the complaint onto law enforcement. The fifth complaint involved an anonymous text message sent to voters a day before the primary that contained negative comments about one of the three candidates running for a county court judgeship. County Solicitor Christine Sadler said the message may have violated the silence period as well as the disclaimer about who paid for its distribution. The challenge, she noted, is that the county is unable to identify who sent the message. She recommended the matter be sent to law enforcement for further review. But since one of the candidates in the race is an assistant district attorney, Berks District Attorney John Adams said he will forward the complaint to the state attorney general's office for investigation. The board voted unanimously to forward the issue to law enforcement.
Yahoo
7 days ago
- Health
- Yahoo
Thanks to those who won't keep their mouths shut
(Photo by Prostock-Studio/Getty Images) Our admiration goes to the Davids of the world: those who stand up, speak out and fight back, refusing to let the Goliaths intimidate or silence them. A recent example is a story by Clark Kauffman, reporter at the Iowa Capital Dispatch. He detailed the allegations in a lawsuit filed by a former certified nurse aide at a nursing home in Fonda, Iowa. The suit was filed against the Fonda Specialty Care nursing home, its parent company, Care Initiatives, and a licensed practical nurse working at the facility. You can read the April 30 story here. The suit alleges that a certified nurse aide observed an 87-year-old resident with a tracheostomy struggling to breathe. The aide sought help from the on-duty nurse to suction the resident's airway. The nurse refused to intervene despite multiple requests from staff members. The aide attempted to contact off-site management but could reach no one. She asked for permission to call 911 and was rebuffed. The resident ultimately died in a manner the lawsuit describes as 'agonizing and painful.' The suit also claims that after the certified nurse aide finished her shift, she received multiple text messages from the facility's administrator to 'keep your mouth shut and keep your opinions to yourself.' She was also instructed not to communicate with the family of the resident who died. The next day, the aide was fired. The facility cited 'resident complaints' as the reason. The nurse aide said she was fired for reporting the incident to the state. KTIV television in Sioux City posted Kauffman's article on their Facebook page, drawing nearly 600 reactions and 200 comments. Responses were candid and often angry. A small sample includes: 'I would never put my parents or anybody I know in a nursing home.' 'The fact that the nursing home tried to cover it up is just as horrible' (as the death). 'My heart breaks for the family and the aides that witnessed it.' 'This makes me sick.' This makes us sick, too. How about you? Imagine being in the shoes of the staff member who allegedly tried to do the right thing, witnessed a horrible death, was fired by her employer, and then had to decide 'what's next?' This nurse's aide chose not 'to keep her mouth shut' but instead to challenge a powerful corporation in court. Some would say that's a fool's errand. We view it as an admirable act of courage. Put this in a larger context. We live in a time where many people, including elected officials, organizations and businesses, find themselves in situations similar to the nurse aide where they are expected to do what they are told and avoid speaking out or acting on what they believe is right. Here are recent examples: Legislators who don't vote the way a governor or president demands. The student on campus who speaks up for Palestinians. The university president or corporate head who doesn't comply with diversity, equity and inclusion directives. National news organizations that write an editorial or airs programs the powers that be don't like. Foreign leaders who disagree publicly with a U.S. government representative. Law firms that challenge governmental actions. Entertainers who bring attention to social injustices. The list could go on and on. It's not a good time to be an independent thinker, to swim against the tide, or to tell the emperor that they have no clothes. The message to all the rulebreakers out there is this: Toe the line. Do what you're told. There will be hell to pay if you disobey. The fact that it's not a good time to speak out is why we need people to speak out. We applaud the certified nurse aide and all those like her who are courageously standing up for what they believe. They are making what John Lewis called 'good trouble.' Davids can and do defeat the Goliaths. Not all the time, not without great difficulty. But is the fight worth fighting? Indeed, it is. John and Terri Hale own The Hale Group, an Ankeny-based advocacy firm focused on older Iowans, Iowans with disabilities and the caregivers who support them. Contact them at terriandjohnhale@

Yahoo
02-05-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Trial continued for last of Goshen School Board candidates involved in mailer scheme
GOSHEN — One candidate accused of fraudulent filing in the 2022 Goshen Community Schools election race may yet be going to trial for the charges. Andrea M. Johnson's jury trial scheduled for May 12, was continued in Elkhart County Superior Court 3 on Wednesday. Of the five individuals charged in the election fraud scandal, Johnson is the only one to not plead guilty. Johnson is also the only one who has not previously held public office. Sitting Goshen School Board members, at the time, Roger Nafziger, Jose Elizalde, Allan Kauffman and Mario Garber, along with candidate Johnson first faced election fraud charges from the Elkhart County Election Board due to improperly tracking funds after a mailer was released from their election campaigns back in October 2022. During an Elkhart County Election Board hearing April 27, 2023, Kauffman, who also happened to be Elizalde's campaign chairman, said he was approached by retired school teacher Sue Neeb because of concerns she had about 2022 Primary Election school board candidates Rob Roeder, Ryan Glick and Linda Hartman. At the time, Kauffman would not offer the name of the former educator for the same reasons the educator wished to remain anonymous. The teacher told Kauffman she was concerned about the future of local education should Purple for Parents-endorsed candidates Roeder, Glick, and Hartman gain elected office. At the time, Kauffman said the teacher wished to remain anonymous to prevent backlash to her husband's business. The teacher helped gather funds summing up to $11,770, which Kauffman distributed them between the four election candidates, whose campaign finance committees paid Maple Leaf Printing for the cost of the mailer. The campaigns listed Kauffman as the donor on campaign finance forms, which the election board later discovered was technically untrue as they were gathered by Neeb. Per election law, any person who donates more than $100 toward a campaign should be listed on finance forms. The Elkhart County Election Board found that Neeb had collected funds from a total of 32 individuals and, while she did keep some records, election law dictates that donors offer name, address, occupation, date, and dollar amount for all donations — and Neeb did not collect all of the necessary information. Back in December 2022, during election board proceedings, Johnson said she was concerned from the beginning that she'd made a mistake in her first-ever campaign and went to the clerk on several occasions with questions. 'I actually filed my very first report late because I was in my car going over things and didn't realize it had to be in 'by noon,' so it was in at like 12:30 or something like that,' she said. 'I went back in and checked again and then I was told that there were no other forms until the end of the year when everything would be closed out. It's my fault that I did not look. I just had no idea that there was an amount that I would have to file before the end of the year and so I apologize.' She added that when she learned about the CFA-11 form, she emailed it late at night before the election along with a letter explaining, in hopes that she wouldn't be in violation. She also told the board that she didn't know the funds weren't Kauffman's. As a newbie to campaigning, she said she was just happy to be included but made it clear to the group that she didn't have the money to help fund the mailer with the others, and was told that Kauffman would cover it and she believed the funds came directly from him. Election board members ultimately issued penalties to nearly 40 people involved in the election campaign finance fraud in April 2023, ranging from $150 to $250, following months of proceedings. Neeb was fined $2,000, while the candidates were referred to the prosecutor's office for formal proceedings. Each of the accused faced a charge of filing a fraudulent report, a Level 6 felony, and accepting a contribution made in another's name, a Class B misdemeanor. Kauffman had the same charges but had five counts of the Class B misdemeanor instead of the one. Nafziger, Elizalde and Garber, remain sitting school board members although all were sentenced within the last year, having pleaded guilty to Count 1 — filing a fraudulent report, a Level 6 felony. Their second counts of accepting a contribution made in another's name, a Class B misdemeanor were dismissed, and their felony charges were treated as misdemeanors per the plea agreements. The same plea deal was offered to all but Kauffman; The deal offered to the other members of the election fraud scandal was to plead guilty to the felony and be sentenced to 365 days at the Elkhart County Jail, suspended on reporting probation, with probation to be terminated after one weekend of a community-oriented work program. Former Goshen mayor Allan Kauffman resigned from the school board in February 2024, citing health concerns. The health concerns were also a contributing factor to his sentence. Despite being categorized by the state as the ringleader of the controversy, Kauffman pleaded guilty in open court on Friday and was sentenced on all counts without a plea deal. He was sentenced on Count 1, filing a fraudulent report, a Level 6 felony, to one year at the Elkhart County Correctional Facility suspended on reporting probation; Counts 2 through 6, all reckless contribution to a campaign, a Class B misdemeanor, to 180 days at the Elkhart County Jail suspended on one year of reporting probation, all to be served concurrently. On Wednesday, Johnson's attorney told the court that they're still in discovery, with new and additional information received, they're not yet ready to go to trial over the matter. Her attorney, Phillip Miller said the defense team is also considering taking deposition from Kauffman, but could not do so until his case was resolved. Last Friday, he was sentenced. The state said they are also still in the discovery process. Elkhart County Circuit Court Judge Teresa Cataldo agreed to continue the jury trial. A status conference is scheduled for Aug. 13. DANIEL STARCHER A man accused of stealing a car out of Michigan pleaded guilty to a lesser charge in Elkhart Circuit Court on Wednesday. Police attempted to perform a traffic stop at C.R. 17 and Beck Drive on the stolen blue Ford F-150 at 2:03 p.m. Feb. 26 that fled the scene. While fleeing, the truck was struck after disregarding a lighted red signal at the intersection of C.R. 17 and Beck Drive. The vehicle was determined to be stolen out of Three Rivers, Michigan, after the owner left the truck running at a gas station. Police claimed Daniel Starcher, who was also involved in the crash, had stolen it and brought it home to pick up his dog before the crash. Starcher admitted to stealing the truck. Starcher pleaded guilty on Wednesday to Count 2, resisting law enforcement, a Level 6 felony. For his plea, Count 1, auto theft, a Level 6 felony, will be dismissed. Sentencing is scheduled for May 28. CRISTIAN A. ANDRADE-PALACIOS A man pleaded guilty to a drunk driving crash that resulted in multiple injuries during Wednesday's court proceedings in Elkhart County Circuit Court. Elkhart County deputies responded to the call for a crash at 4:14 p.m. June 17, 2023, where a 2014 Mercedes Benz driven by Cristian A. Andrade-Palacios had struck a 2020 Jeep Wrangler. Police say Lillian Coffman had been driving southeast on Ind. 119 east of C.R. 9 in the Jeep when Andrade-Palacios in the Mercedes entered oncoming traffic to pass a vehicle in front of him heading north and caused a head-on collision with Coffman's vehicle. Witnesses said traffic was slowed due to a tractor on the road. Coffman suffered several fractures to her hand and remained without proper use of her hand into at least January 2024, was unable to write or type properly, and that gripping the steering wheel was also difficult. In addition, an infant in Andrade-Palacios' vehicle suffered a broken leg that required surgery. After the crash, police conducted field sobriety tests on him and Andrade-Palacios' consented to a blood test showing a 0.214 blood alcohol content. Andrade-Palacios' said he'd had three or four beers prior to the drive that lead up to the crash. Andrade-Palacios pleaded guilty to both counts of causing serious bodily injury while operating a vehicle while intoxicated, both Level 5 felonies. Sentence is scheduled for May 28.


CBS News
01-05-2025
- Business
- CBS News
Public split on seasonal street closures beginning in Northville, Michigan
In October 2023, a nonprofit called Let's Open Northville filed a lawsuit against the city of Northville, Michigan, to permanently reopen downtown streets that had been closed for six months. On Thursday, May 1, those seasonal street closures kicked off again. CBS Detroit The closures occur on two primary downtown roads, Center and Main streets. "You see people while they're having their meals, going into different stores, brings more foot traffic around," said visitor Andrew Stoe. "I was walking down the sidewalk and I'm thinking, wait a minute. I can walk down the street and not have to look for cars," resident Barbara Benton said. The seasonal closure from May until November occurs seven days a week and is part of the city's outdoor dining and social district season, which has been in place since the COVID-19 pandemic. The Northville community has been engaged in a heated debate for the last several years. Avid walkers like Benton have split on the issue. "I like that they're closed when I walk my dog down here, but then I like them to be open if I'm just going to drive down here, pick up something quick," Benton said. For small business owners like Prudence Kauffman, who relies on a high volume of customers, the street closures are detrimental to both her stores on Center Street. CBS Detroit "You come out Monday through Thursday; there's no one. It's a ghost town on the street. The street closures have definitely diminished our walk-in traffic. We don't get nearly as many people that are driving through town and see our sign and say hey, I want to stop in there," said Dear Prudence/Blackbird Owner Prudence Kauffman. Kauffman says she's taken her frustrations to the city, but those concerns fall on deaf ears. Northville Mayor Brian Turnbull tells CBS News Detroit he's listening and values the input from the public. "It's really a gathering place for Southeastern Michigan and the communities around the Detroit area. Will it be that way the rest of our lives? Not necessarily. That's why we put bollards in, so we could be flexible in the future. We're looking and trying to be flexible and listening to our businesses, listening to our citizens, and listening to community input, both the city and the township," Turnbull said. Meanwhile, Kauffman has to deal with these closures and hopes a compromise with the city will come sooner rather than later. "We just really like to find some sort of compromise, like close the streets down only on the weekends, or leave Center open, close Main Street, but the city, they just won't look at that as an option," Kauffman said. The trial between "Let's Open Northville" and the city of Northville is scheduled to begin in June 2025.

Yahoo
27-04-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Former Goshen mayor sentenced in election fraud scandal
GOSHEN — Goshen's former mayor will serve a suspended sentence on probation after pleading guilty and being sentenced in court Friday. Allan Kauffman, who served as mayor of Goshen from 1997 to 2015, was subsequently charged with election fraud while serving as a member of the Goshen Community Schools Board of Trustees in 2022. On Friday, he pleaded guilty to all six charges, without a plea agreement and skipped presentence investigation, moving straight on to sentencing. Kauffman was one of three incumbent members of the Goshen School Board and one newcomer accused of election fraud after they released a costly mailer to addresses in Elkhart Township. According to Elkhart County Superior Court 3 Judge Teresa Cataldo, Kauffman was the ringleader. 'Because others entrusted that you would know that law since you're the one that has been in the public service for so long, they put their trust in you,' Cataldo said. 'Because of your position, people will listen to you. People expect you to know what to do and they trust that you will give them advice that won't get them into trouble.' Cataldo argued that Kauffman held a greater responsibility. 'You have had a dedicated life to the service of the public,' Cataldo said. School board members, Jose Elizalde, Mario Garber, Roger Nafziger and non incumbent Andrea Johnson, were all running for Goshen Community School Board. Kauffman reportedly gathered and distributed $11,770 among the four candidates as Elizalde's campaign chairman. The funds were divided among the four candidates and then pulled to release a mailer denouncing three of the other 2022 candidates Rob Roeder, Ryan Glick and Linda Hartman, and their connection to Purple For Parents on Oct. 29. During an Elkhart County Election Board hearing on April 27, 2023, Kauffman said he was approached by retired school teacher Sue Neeb because of concerns she had about the Purple for Parents-affiliated school board candidates. Neeb allegedly told Kauffman she was concerned about the future of local education should Purple for Parents-endorsed candidates Roeder, Glick and Hartman gain elected office. Kauffman said the teacher wished to remain anonymous to prevent backlash of her husband's business. The teacher gathered the funds and Kauffman distributed them between the four election candidates, whose campaign finance committees paid Maple Leaf Printing for the cost of the mailer. They listed Kauffman as the donor on campaign finance forms, which the election board later discovered was technically untrue. Per election law, any person who donates more than $100 toward a campaign should be listed on finance forms. The Elkhart County Election Board found that Neeb had collected funds from a total of 32 individuals and, while she did keep some records, election law dictates that donors offer name, address, occupation, date, and dollar amount for all donations — and Neeb did not collect all of the necessary information. Each of the five individuals were charged with filing a fraudulent report, a Level 6 felony. All but Kauffman were charged with a single count of accepting a contribution made in another's name, a Class B misdemeanor, after allegedly filing fraudulent campaign finance reports. Kauffman, has the same charges but has five counts of the Class B misdemeanor instead of just one. Garber, Nafziger and Elizalde are current sitting board members. Kauffman resigned from the board Feb. 26, 2024, citing health concerns. Keith Goodman was voted in as his replacement in late March. Nafziger, Elizalde and Garber were sentenced by plea agreement last year, to filing a fraudulent report, a Level 6 felony, and the convictions were each entered as a Class A misdemeanor. The deal offered to the other members of the election fraud scandal was to plead guilty to the felony and be sentenced to 365 days at the Elkhart County Jail, suspended on reporting probation, with probation to be terminated after one weekend of a community-oriented work program. Prosecution has said they offered the same misdemeanor status to almost everyone involved in the case, or at the very least agreed to stay silent if it was requested. But the offer would not stand for Kauffman, who was regarded by the state and apparently Judge Cataldo, too, as the ringleader, having collected and distributed the funds. On Friday, Kauffman pleaded openly in court to all charges, without a plea agreement and went on directly to sentencing. Kauffman's attorney Peter Britton also said that Kauffman openly explained the circumstances and his part in the scandal to the Elkhart County Election Board, resulting in a fine of about $2,000 as a civil sanction for violations. In addition, Britton explained that the money that was gathered was all used for the exact election purposes as Kauffman said it would be. A slew of supporters in attendance, and over a dozen letters in support of Kauffman's character were also submitted to the court during his sentencing, and Britton read a letter from Kauffman, who apologized to the court for his actions and explained the oversight, but did not speak much during the hearing himself. Britton did further explain Kauffman's deteriorating health and declining mental state as a result of Parkinson's. Britton told the court that given the circumstances and his dwindling health due to a progressive neurological disorder and at 76-years-old, Kauffman has no intention of running in any future elections. Britton also explained as a mitigating factor that, diagnosed formally in 2024, Kauffman may have also been suffering from the same neurological deficits or psychosis during the situation in 2022. 'It's been difficult because with that history, he has made a name for himself in the community,' he said. 'And through his own conduct since this event transpired… his reputation has been damaged significantly and that's something that he finds very disturbing since he worked so hard to build that reputation up.' Britton also asked that, like the other defendants, Kauffman's Level 6 felony be treated as a misdemeanor. Elkhart County Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Kaitlynn Campoli argued that the incident was no mistake. 'Anyone who runs for public office should, at the bare minimum, be reading the rules and following those rules,' she said. 'Mr. Kauffman absolutely knew better. He was a prior elected official, mayor of the City of Goshen, he's very familiar with these processes and disclosures that must be made.' Campoli argued that Kauffman was the mastermind and used his authority to lead the others in the fraud case. 'Mr. Kauffman was going to use whatever means possible to effectuate his goals,' Campoli said. 'Given that he was an elected official, he held himself out as having authority and he knew others would be reliant on that and relied on him and his experiences.' Cataldo appeared to agree with Campoli. 'Your intent was not to defraud, but it was an intent to deceive,' Cataldo said, saying she didn't know why people who wanted to donate to those campaigns didn't just donate to those campaigns. 'The fact that this is coming up and others depended on your expertise in this area and now they are faced with felony charges also, I understand that you might feel remorse for that, but that doesn't negate the fact that you were the one in this instance that was entrusted to make sure that all of these things would be done correctly and they weren't.' Cataldo said she was struggling to give credence to the law of Indiana but also expectations toward what happens when someone breaks election law. 'It didn't harm any specific person or property, but what I do think it harmed is the democratic system itself, because everybody thinks that politicians can't be trusted, politicians are always lying and politicians are always trying to hide something,' Cataldo said. 'In this case, the politician was trying to hide something and that means politicians can't be trusted. You haven't harmed any one person, but this has severely harmed the system, and it's a system that I try to upload and I hold very near and dear to my heart.' Kauffman was sentenced on Count 1, filing a fraudulent report, a Level 6 felony, to one year at the Elkhart County Correctional Facility suspended on reporting probation; Counts 2 through 6, all reckless contribution to a campaign, a Class B misdemeanor, to 180 days at the Elkhart County Jail suspended on one year of reporting probation. All sentences to be served concurrently. He was also fined $10,000, and the fine was suspended. One of the accused remains unconvicted. Andrea Johnson is the only individual accused who had never run for public office before the 2022 election. Her jury trial was scheduled for May 12, but on Wednesday a motion for continuance was filed. A hearing on the motion will be held on April 30.