WHEELING — The Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 38 now has the signatures of those seeking an election on Wheeling’s two-officer per cruiser ordinance, thanks to a ruling by Ohio County Circuit Judge Arthur Recht.
“It screams out for public disclosure,” Recht said, citing Section 81 of the Wheeling City Charter regarding petitions submitted to City Council. “It screams out to be tested.”
Meanwhile, signature collectors George Jones and William Hefner want to be dismissed from the case involving them, Wheeling and the FOP because they believe city officials did not properly explain to them the meaning of the word “affidavit.”
City Solicitor Rosemary Hum-way-Warmuth wanted to keep the signature pages away from the FOP. As the basis for her motion, Humway-Warmuth cited a Jefferson County Circuit Court case in which The Sheperdstown Observer sued Circuit Clerk Jennifer Maghan in an effort to force her to release a petition submitted by voters. After Maghan denied the newspaper’s request, noting her office did not create the document, Circuit Judge David Saunders ruled in her favor.
Recht, however, did not seem to care what Saunders thought of the matter.
“Any other circuit court decision is not binding. ... There are 65 circuit judges in West Virginia. I don’t care what the other 64 are doing — and so that there is no misunderstanding, I’m sure that they don’t care what I’m doing,” he said.
FOP attorney Joseph John has said that he has witnesses who will testify that they did not sign the petition, even though their signatures appeared on it.
After City Clerk Janice Jones certified 2,469 signatures to City Council in July, members voted unanimously in August to accept the petition. Humway-Warmuth then immediately filed suit against petition circulator George Jones in an effort to hold the election in May, rather than within 90 days as the City Charter seems to mandate.
After Recht allowed the FOP to intervene in the original lawsuit, John claimed Janice Jones and council should not have accepted the signatures because George Jones and Hefner did not adhere to the City Charter. John and the FOP claim some of the signatures were forged or improperly collected.
Now George Jones and Hefner have filed a motion, assisted by attorney Paul Harris, to dismiss them from the lawsuit. They claim city officials knowingly accepted the petition without adhering to the requirements of Charter Section 81 dealing with affidavits.
Regarding petitions submitted to the city, the charter states: “... there shall be attached thereto the affidavit of the circulator thereof stating that each signature was made in the circulator’s presence. ...” Black’s Law Dictionary defines “affidavit” as “a voluntary declaration of facts written down and sworn to by the declarant before an officer authorized to administer oaths, such as a notary republic.”
“We submitted the petition to them (city) with our signatures at the bottom of each page. We thought that was good enough,” George Jones said after the hearing. He noted the city accepted the petitions even though the charter states he and Hefner did not meet all the requirements.
Recht will hear a motion to remove George Jones and Hefner from the case at 3:30 p.m. Nov. 12 in his courtroom on the fifth floor of the City-County Building, 1500 Chapline St., Wheeling. A regular day of testimony in the case is scheduled for 8 a.m. Nov. 25 in the same venue.
State News
W.Va. judge approves releasing petition names
- State News
-
-
W.Va. lawmakers, governor’s office compete to be fit
West Virginia lawmakers are taking some extra steps this month to promote the battle against the state’s obesity problem.
-
WVU notes
WVU wants to stop company’s shirt production
Law firm kicks in $200,000 for WVU renovation
WVU-Parkersburg board OKs tuition hike
-
W.Va. news briefs
Inmate accused of attacking prison workers
Auditors: Mason County addressing problems
Larry King coming to city
West Virginia receives $34 million in national mortgage lending deal
W.Va. to get $9.3 million to improve Internet
-
W.Va. news briefs
Ex-teacher charged in sex abuse
Man and his son found dead after fire were shot
Hopeful relatives renew search for missing girl
- Coal group wants Blair Mountain mining case tossed
- 2 Md. men face bank fraud charge
- Mining companies feted for workplace safety
- 2 young girls killed Saturday in house fire
-
Report: 18.7 percent lack a nest egg
A nonprofit group says nearly one in five West Virginia residents have almost no savings or other assets to weather a financial crisis.
-
W.Va. news briefs
Legislature holding mine safety hearings
Proposal would expand public hearings in state
Applicants sought for judgeships in Panhandle, Putnam County
- More State News Headlines
-
W.Va. lawmakers, governor’s office compete to be fit






