CLEVELAND, Ohio -If you want a front-row seat to just how shameless Ohio lawmakers can be, look no further than the middle-of-the-night sneak attack they pulled to help the Browns bail on Cleveland — all while pretending it’s for the taxpayers.
We’re talking about how lawmakers used the state’s budget process to interfere with a lawsuit on behalf of billionaires, on Today in Ohio.
Editor Chris Quinn hosts our daily half-hour news podcast, with editorial board member Lisa Garvin, impact editor Leila Atassi and content director Laura Johnston.
You’ve been sending Chris lots of thoughts and suggestions on our from-the-newsroom text account, in which he shares what we’re thinking about at cleveland.com. You can sign up here: https://joinsubtext.com/chrisquinn.
Here’s what we’re asking about today:
The conference committee reconciliation of the various budgets in Ohio is not supposed to introduce new elements, but the Ohio House and Senate pulled perhaps the most sleazy move of the cycle – and there’s a lot of competition – with the new element they added. What is it?
Sticking with the Browns, we have more clarity on a story we discussed yesterday. What are the specific provisions of the U.S. and Ohio constitutions that a planned lawsuit will cite in seeking to block the use of Ohio’s unclaimed funds to help build a new Browns stadium?
The voters created it with the idea that the Legislature would work in good faith to make it work. The Ohio House budget all but destroyed it. The Senate restored it. Now, it’s pretty much dead. What is ahead for the state school board if Mike DeWine does not use a line item veto?
Dr. Amy Acton gave a speech at the City Club of Cleveland Wednesday. What was her message as she continues her campaign to be the Democratic candidate for governor in 2026?
Vice president JD Vance was back in Ohio to meet with Republicans in his hometown and was ebullient in his message. What were some of the many things he said to celebrate Donald Trump?
The Ohio Supreme Court has agreed to handle a case that was big news when it happened, the killing of a firefighter by a runaway driver. Terrible tragedy. Reckless behavior. But the legal question on this is not so simple. What will the court decide?
We had a tragic incident happen almost outside our front window this week, another example of someone with clear mental illness issues forcing police to kill him. What happened?
We have a pretty big fight brewing over parking and street flows around the West Side Market. What’s the proposal that is causing so much consternation?
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Read the automated transcript below. Because it’s a computer-generated transcript, it contains many errors and misspellings.
Chris Quinn (00:01.208)
Just when you think the Ohio legislature cannot get more sleazy or corrupt, they surprise us anew. It’s the first story we’re talking about on Today in Ohio. It’s the news podcast discussion from cleveland.com and the Plain Dealer. I’m Chris Quinn here with Courtney Astolfi, Lisa Garvin, and Leila Tassi. And Leila, you’re up. The Conference Committee Reconciliation of the Various Budgets in Ohio by the Legislature.
isn’t supposed to introduce new elements, but the Ohio House and Senate pulled perhaps the most sleazy move of the cycle. There’s a lot of competition there with the new element that they did add. What is it?
Leila (00:43.288)
Yeah, Chris, this happened kind of in the dark of night. It literally 1 30 in the morning caught us off guard the next day. Ohio lawmakers tucked this last minute change into the state budget that could effectively kill Cleveland’s lawsuit trying to stop the Browns from relocating to Brook Park. It’s a direct hit on the state’s so-called Modell Law, which was created to prevent teams from walking away from taxpayer funded stadiums.
without giving cities a fair shot to stop them or even buy them. And the original law said that teams couldn’t just leave a city like Cleveland unless they got permission or offered to sell to local buyers. But this sneaky amendment rewrites that. Now the rule only applies if a team tries to leave the state, not the city. So as long as the Browns stay somewhere in Ohio, like say 12 miles away in Brook Park,
They’re in the clear. And then even worse is that the budget language also says that just letting the lease expire counts as getting the city’s approval. So Cleveland’s legal leverage has basically been nuked, made lawsuit by this rewriting of the law. Naturally, city and county officials are pretty furious about this. They’re calling it a betrayal and a power grab and a complete undermining of local governments. But the Browns are pretty thrilled.
Their owners say the team’s still in Cuyahoga County. So what’s the big deal? And the big deal, of course, is that the law meant to protect cities just got gutted behind closed doors in the most cynical way possible.
Chris Quinn (02:21.104)
Yeah, I’ve said from the beginning, I didn’t really think the Modell law applied or was aimed at this kind of a move that it was aimed at people leaving the state entirely. So this is an ends justify the means thing. But I think the significance of this is the sleaze factor. This is a pitched battle. The city and county and a whole bunch of people in Cuyahoga County don’t like this move.
And they saw these lawsuits as a way to hash it out. The city and county acting in good faith, the city used this law to get before a judge to say, this isn’t right. The legislature doesn’t care about us or Cleveland or Cuyahoga County. They don’t represent us. They represent the people that pay them. The Haslums went to Columbus and helped fund the issue one defeat measure.
so that they could keep gerrymandering. They were a big funder for Matt Huffman. This is the favor they get back. They have bought this. That’s plain and simple. They bought the legislature. Rob McCauley got up, the Senate president, and said, look, we’ve been talking about this for a long time. It’s the right thing to do. So we snuck it in in the middle of the night because it’s the right thing to do. That’s complete horse hockey. You want to do this? Have hearings. Pass it as a bill. This is a bill. Pass it as a bill.
Leila (03:42.946)
Right.
Chris Quinn (03:46.354)
Let the Browns come in and testify publicly instead of this secret nonsense behind closed doors. Let Chris Ronane and Justin Bibb testify publicly. This is just the worst example of the sleaze factor that exists. There’s one Hail Mary here, if we keep the football analogy, and that Mike DeWine could veto it. But does anybody have any confidence that he will do that? He’s been so lily-livered in the second term. I don’t think he’ll take a stand against almost anything they did.
Leila (03:58.765)
Yeah.
Leila (04:15.072)
Yeah, and I agree. This is just one example of what they’ve done with this budget. This isn’t how lawmaking is supposed to work. Major policy changes, especially ones that directly benefit powerful interests, shouldn’t be slipped into the state budget without public hearings, without any debate, without any lawmaker putting their name on it. So it’s just this backdoor maneuver that sidesteps accountability.
and shuts us all out of the process. This really, as you said, they should have had the courage to introduce it as a standalone bill and defend it in the light of day.
Chris Quinn (04:52.966)
This doesn’t, in my mind, help the Browns. mean, the people of this county largely dislike the Haslums. And dislike is a weak word for the passion they feel for them over Deshaun Watson, over their politics, over the way they’ve manipulated the legislature to get what they want. They likely would have prevailed in these lawsuits. This makes them a complicit
in the worst stain that’s come out of this legislature in a very stained budget process. My jaw dropped when I saw this because they didn’t need to do it. The courts would have taken care of this. There was no need to handle it this way. And yet here we are. The sleaziest people on the planet are representing us, but they’re not. Shocking story. I still cannot believe that they did it this way.
You’re listening to Today in Ohio. Lisa, let’s stick with the Browns. We have more clarity on the story we discussed yesterday. What are the specific provisions of the U.S. and Ohio constitutions that a planned lawsuit will cite in seeking to block the use of Ohio’s unclaimed funds to help build this new controversial Brown Stadium?
Lisa (05:53.473)
Thank
Lisa (06:08.233)
Yeah, this suit that they’re preparing to file, it’s a class action suit that’s being brought by former Democratic representative Jeff Crossman and former Democratic AG Mark Dan. They say, you know, they sent a draft to reporters Wednesday, it could be filed as early as today. So they say it violates the U S constitution’s right to due process and taking private property without compensation.
It violates the Ohio constitution’s guarantee against seizure of private property. It’s also a breach of fiduciary duty to protect unclaimed funds and also violates the single subject rule. Dan says, this is not a slush fund, your favorite word, Chris, for lawmakers. It’s a legal moral obligation to safeguard that money until it’s claimed it’s not for a billionaire stadium. And Crossman says, know,
you know, they were questioned, do you have standing to sue since your clients can really just submit the request for their money and get it? And he says, we don’t even know if they can get their money if they try to get it.
Chris Quinn (07:10.2)
I agree that there’s a serious legal challenge here. We talked about it yesterday. This is not the state’s money. It is the people’s money. How can they use it? I just wonder if there’s a sleight of hand they could do. What if they guaranteed the money would be replaced with the full faith and credit of the general fund or something so that the exposure is gone? They are using money that’s not theirs. They’ve done it before, so there’s precedent for it, but...
Lisa (07:37.417)
Yes.
Chris Quinn (07:39.864)
only because nobody challenged it before. don’t think they’ll be able to say we’ve done it before, but I don’t know that that’s going to work in court. The court is going to say, you shouldn’t have done it then either. Now you have a full challenge. The big thing is it’s legitimate enough. This will gum up the Brown Stadium plan. The legislature shouldn’t have done this. They should have gone with Mike DeWine’s plan on sports betting, which would have moved
much more quickly he wanted to double the tax on sports betting for stadium fund i think if they file this it’ll work i mean there are questions of fact here that should go to a jury
Lisa (08:17.579)
Yeah, they did say, know, Tristan Rader, who’s a Republican, or rather Democrat from Lakewood, he got a memo from the Legislative Service Commission about the constitutionality of this. He said, in the memo, there was no previous ruling in any Ohio court on taking unclaimed funds in this particular fashion. In the 2009, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled that fund owners are entitled to interest earned, but they didn’t consider
whether the unclaimed property was, you know, plainly legislated. So the memo said the court will probably consider two questions in the suit, whether the state’s eminent domain powers allow them to keep the money after a certain period, and whether using it for stadiums or cultural facilities in the current budget is for a public purpose. Now the Senate...
Republicans in Ohio, they’re defending the constitutionality of it. They said it’s a creative solution for using money that’s just sitting around.
Chris Quinn (09:16.742)
You know, you use the word creative when you’re basically breaking the law because you don’t need to be creative if you’re working within the confines of the law because you’re doing what the law allows. Anytime somebody uses that word, you immediately should have your radar up. Journalists certainly should because that means there’s something wrong here. They know that they have a problem. The thing is, it gets back to our first discussion. It’s another example.
of the legislature acting like lords and masters over the state instead of thinking about the people they serve. They had other solutions, but instead of that, like pigs at the trough, they see this big pile of money in a state account and they think it’s theirs to squander and it’s not. And I’ll be really interested to see how these lawsuits proceed. I think they’re gonna have a better chance in federal court than in state court because ultimately our corrupt Ohio Supreme Court, which just...
bases its rulings on party, not legal facts, will okay whatever they do. I mean, it’s just a rubber stamp. No matter what they want to do, they get okayed. But for the Fourth Amendment, unreasonable seizure, the constitutional issue is a pretty good one.
Leila (10:26.51)
So Chris, let me ask you this question because this was not Governor DeWine’s preferred method of funding the stadium, clearly. Do you think that there’s a chance he could veto this part of, you don’t think so? I mean, it’s so complex. Like you said, it could gum up the entire Brook Park Stadium plan. So why not give it a try? Veto. Veto, veto, veto.
Chris Quinn (10:39.954)
No, no, I look, I hate this.
Chris Quinn (10:51.6)
We’ve had so many examples over the last few years of things that common sense dictated he should veto, and he’s a rubber stamp. He doesn’t go up against the legislature. And this is one where I’m not sure they could override his veto, because it’s controversial enough where you might not have the votes, even with the super majority, but he just doesn’t stand up. I expect he’ll do.
Leila (11:14.52)
But it’s a huge liability and it’s, you know, I don’t care.
Chris Quinn (11:18.222)
It’s a liability and but if they lose they lose and then they’ll come up with some other corrupt way of doing it. But I just don’t see it. He’ll do some line item vetoes on little things. But my bet is he won’t line item veto any of the things we’re going to be talking about. You know, the decimation of the state school board or the move to
Well, he might have he could veto the move to appoint carners instead of electing them. I could see him sending that back saying, come on, that might be a good idea. But hold hearings, guys. This isn’t the way to do it. that that did get removed. OK, well, that’s good, because that was a stupid idea. But no, I my bet is he’ll sign this and my bet is the courts will gum it up. And my bet is that Park City will not open in the timetable that the Browns want. That’s what happens when
Leila (11:52.8)
I don’t think that was in there.
Yeah.
Lisa (12:01.153)
I he’s so scientist. I bet he is. Of course, he’s a doctor. I bet he’s a scientist.
Chris Quinn (12:12.912)
the legislature acts corruptly. If they would have gone with Mike DeWine’s plan, it would have been okay. But because they’re doing this, which is not appropriate, it’ll get gummed up and it’ll slow down what the Browns want to do. You’re listening to Today in Ohio. The voters created it with the idea that the legislature would work in good faith to make it operate right. The Ohio House budget all but destroyed it. Then the Senate restored it.
Now Courtney, it’s pretty much dead again. What is ahead for the state school board if Mike DeWine does not use a line item veto to preserve it?
Courtney (12:50.628)
it’s gonna be dramatically restructured. And I don’t think that your description using the word decimation is off track here. That sure seems like where we’re headed with this because this really does gut what’s left of the state board of education. So this idea, as you noted, was originally pushed by the house. It’s now in that budget bill and it’s gonna reduce the board from 19 members to just five. All of those five new folks would be.
appointed by the governor, confirmed by the Senate. It eliminates the current 11 seats that are now tied to geographic districts around the state directly elected by the people. And basically these new members to be appointed by the government, it’s structured in such a way where they all have to be Ohio voters and then they all must each represent a different type of school district. So we’d have one from rural schools, suburban, urban, charter and private schools.
The current board members would be allowed to serve out their terms, but no successors will be elected or appointed. And as reporter Laura Hancock put it in her reporting, this change really completes the state’s takeover of the state school board. They started gutting it two years ago with that move to put much of the functionality of the board under the direction of the governor. And this just puts a bow on that. You know, as you’ve repeatedly pointed out, Chris, during this debate,
This runs a foul of that voter approved constitutional amendment from 1953 to create that independently elected board. And the reason we did that back then is because we thought it was too political under the governor led system. Yet here we are back again.
Chris Quinn (14:34.812)
Yeah, they believed, people were believed that with the governor running it, that it was politicized, wasn’t about the kids, wasn’t about education. It was just whatever was convenient in the moment. And so they went to the polls in large numbers and said, no, no, no, we’re going to put the entire education policy under a state school board. But because they trusted the legislature back then in a way we can’t possibly now that
Amendment didn’t dictate how to form the board. The legislature followed the will of the voters, created a system that worked for 70 years to have policy decisions about education in the hands of people we elect. For the most part, they ended up making some appointed and it worked. They have unilaterally trashed that because that constitutional amendment didn’t say what the makeup should be. They’ve taken all the money away. They’ve put the whole policy back under the governor.
They are flatly violating what was intended with that constitutional amendment. And of course, like I said, we have an Ohio Supreme Court you cannot count on to stand up for the constitution. And so they have stolen education policy from the voters of this state. And this completes the journey. That’s our legislature, man. They don’t care what the voters have put into the constitution. They are the Lord and masters telling us what’s good for us. Another example of that right here.
How many stories are we going to talk about today where this is what comes through? The legislature, Lord and master, voters don’t count.
Courtney (16:10.682)
Yeah, and you know, we did talk to a current board member from Toledo, a former Democratic lawmaker. She makes the same dang point. She says this language usurps the power of the people, Teresa Fedor. If the governor doesn’t veto this language, she said, then, you know, the state house is legislating away Ohioans constitutional rights.
Chris Quinn (16:33.155)
Illegally, because it violates the Constitution. The Constitution is the defining document of how our state works. And they’re all trashing it and burning it, which they’ve been doing since the gerrymandering debate began. You’re listening to Today in Ohio. Dr. Amy Acton gave a speech at the City Club of Cleveland Wednesday. Layla, what was her message as she continues her campaign to be the Democratic candidate for governor next year?
Leila (16:58.306)
Yeah, Dr. Acton made it pretty clear that she’s running against the status quo in Ohio that we’ve just been talking about here on this podcast. Her message was part personal story, part political call to action, and then a reminder of just how broken she thinks things have become in this state. She opened with some vulnerability talking about the trauma and instability that she faced growing up in Youngstown, including homelessness and abuse that she suffered.
and how that early experience shaped her lifelong drive to serve other people. She said that she’s haunted by the stories of kids that she left behind, the ones who never had the same chances that she did. And that is what fuels her campaign. She really did not hold back at all on what she sees as Ohio’s decline. She pointed to worsening health outcomes, underfunded schools, struggling rural hospitals, and a state government she says is being bought by special interests.
And she said something rather startling about why she left her post as the state’s health director. She said she didn’t resign because of the pressure that she was under from the public or the protests at her house. She resigned because she didn’t want to carry out an egregious order that was pushed by someone who ended up under arrest as part of the HB6 scandal. And I thought that was really interesting and a very unexpected revelation.
Chris Quinn (18:27.664)
Yeah, just I don’t know what that would have been. And you know, Larry Householder didn’t direct her, so I don’t know who she could be talking about. I think if you’re going to make a statement like that, you owe it to the public to be clear. That’s the McCarthyism. I got a list of names here and I’m not going to tell you who they are. If you say that, if you’re going to go out in public and say that, it’s not fair not to say what you’re talking about. It taints the entire administration.
Leila (18:30.253)
right.
Chris Quinn (18:56.452)
It just taints the whole process. And I don’t know what she means. I don’t know if you can answer this, but I imagine somebody, the City Club works where you give a half hour speech and then people get to ask questions for a half hour. And I imagine somebody might have asked her, what are you going to do if Sherrod Brown gets into this race? There’s a lot of noise that Sherrod Brown does not want Vivek Ramaswamy as governor, is dead set against it. And he might throw his hat in the ring to make sure that doesn’t happen. I wonder what...
Leila (19:14.189)
Hmm.
Chris Quinn (19:26.021)
she would do.
Leila (19:27.062)
Now, I don’t know if that question was asked and I don’t know what the answer would be, but she’s definitely out there staking her ground early and beating the campaign trail. She’s, know, City Club was a good move. So we’ll see. We’ll see what happens.
Chris Quinn (19:42.928)
Yeah, it was. Yeah. Long way to go. You’re listening to Today in Ohio. Lisa, Vice President JD Vance was back in Ohio to meet with Republicans in his hometown and was ebullient in his messaging. What were some of the many things he said to celebrate Donald Trump?
Lisa (20:00.811)
Yeah, it almost sounds like a whole lot of gloating. So this was a speech at the sold out Republican fundraiser in Lima, Ohio. He said that Ohio is now solidly red and it’s going to stay red for a very long time. He also thanked the audience for helping propel him to the US Senate and then to the vice presidency. So he described the Trump administration as wildly successful.
And he talked about something called the Trump Doctrine, or that’s what he calls it. And he used the Iran bombing by the U.S. as an example. He says, this is quite simple. We articulated a clear American interest, the fact that Iran might be having nukes soon, try to aggressively solve the problem diplomatically, although I think they skipped that step, and then use overwhelming military power if diplomacy fails. Then get the hell out.
Chris Quinn (20:44.571)
Hahaha.
Lisa (20:50.559)
before it becomes an ongoing conflict, which sounds like somebody throwing firecrackers into a crowded room and running away. On tariffs, he said they’ve saved the American economy. He says that Democrats want to give 20 to 25 million illegals the right to vote and become permanent wards of the Democratic party. And then he said the media says that Trump is a threat to democracy, but the real threat is Democrats importing voters instead of persuading fellow citizens.
Chris Quinn (21:19.686)
The let’s get back to Iran for a minute. Let’s remind everybody that JD Vance’s Lord and master, Donald Trump withdrew us from the agreement we had with Iran during his first term. One, they had been obeying to the letter, but because a Democrat had set it up, he withdrew. And that’s what led to some of this proliferation. So it’s the opposite of using diplomacy. Donald Trump trash diplomacy.
Lisa (21:30.485)
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Lisa (21:39.242)
Mm-hmm.
Lisa (21:44.735)
Mm-hmm.
Chris Quinn (21:47.418)
And then with really no evidence that they were getting close to building a bomb, because there isn’t any, we did what we did. Lots of questions. think the report that came out this week that suggests that the damage wasn’t nearly what Donald Trump claimed on the night that it happened is unnerving him. He dropped the word, the F-bomb word in anger because this report came out. But JD Vance is celebrating something that really isn’t there to be celebrated.
Lisa (22:07.221)
Yes, he did.
Chris Quinn (22:16.846)
On immigration, let’s remember, he’s talking about Democrats importing people. JD Vance is the guy that spread the lie about what was happening in Ohio with Haitian immigrants. mean, was shameful, shameful behavior by JD Vance, even in the face of it being proven false. He basically defended spreading false reports because he needed to get his name out there. So this thing sounded like utter nonsense, but he was playing to a crowd that probably ate it up.
Lisa (22:26.0)
In Springfield.
Lisa (22:45.139)
I’m sure they did. You know, it a sold out crowd. I’m sure they cheered and probably had a few standing ovations, but boy, they are awash in the Kool-Aid.
Chris Quinn (22:54.386)
Okay. You’re listening to Today in Ohio. Despite the clear challenges that exist today for hospitals trying to provide services, despite not getting reimbursed enough to cover many costs, the Cleveland Clinic sees some room for expansion, Courtney. What’s the plan out in Avon?
Courtney (23:12.629)
Yeah, there are plans for a huge expansion out at the clinic’s Avon Hospital campus that’s off Nagel Road by the highway there. it’s pretty much going to be doubling in size under these $340 million construction plans that are now in the works. So this will include an
Avon Hospital and that neighboring Richard E. Jacobs Family Health Center facility. You can see it from the highway. They’re also going to be building a parking garage. So right now on the hospital side, it’s going to see an addition of a bed tower.
new operating rooms, a bigger emergency department, and more space for lab and imaging. Now on the Jacobs Center expansion, they’re going to create about 90 additional exam rooms there and more space and ability for cancer services. This is a big increase. When Avon Hospital opened in 2016, it was a five-story, 126-bed facility. The health center next door opened in 2011.
But the clinic is doing this because they’re seeing a lot of demand in this part of our region, right? So since 2017, the clinic tells us there’s been more than a 40 % increase in surgeries and admissions out at the Avon Hospital. There’s been a nearly 75 % increase for imaging services, and it’s got one of the busiest labs in the clinic system. So they see demand and they’re trying to respond to
Chris Quinn (24:35.762)
I don’t think any of you are going to remember this, but back in the early aughts, we had a big shakeout in the pharmacy industry where they were buying up every street corner available in Northeast Ohio to get market share. So you had a Walgreens, was CVS, they were everywhere. mean, every time he turned around, there was another one going up and eventually the shakeout came. And now you see them, a bunch of them turned into dollar stores. This feels like that.
It feels like the hospitals, even though the market’s tight, are trying to set up to get market share. And so they keep expanding, trying to claim it. But has done the same thing to a lesser extent. Metro has done the same thing. And you can’t help but feel that 10, 15 years from now, some of these buildings will be empty because I just don’t see how we can sustain this number of facilities.
Courtney (25:31.551)
Well, you’ve got that dynamic too. then so much of this used to, you know, population changes and where folks are moving each generation layered on top of that dynamic. You know, right now they say this is where the demand is. So that’s where they they need their services to be. We got a statement from clinic CEO Tom Mahalovic. He said, you know, kind of pointed at that. Are regions continuously evolving? He said, and the clinics taken a sub market approach. And he said that allows them to, you know,
adapt to serve patients’ as the geography changes.
Chris Quinn (26:06.37)
You’re listening to today in Ohio according you bumped your microphone or something and it started a new recording and you’re no longer on the mic.
Courtney (26:16.445)
Okay.
Chris Quinn (26:16.626)
I think you’re coming through your computer and you sound really tinny. So you’re going to have to get off, make sure your wires are in and come back because I don’t know I’m going to be able to fix that sound.
Courtney (26:20.746)
shi-
Courtney (26:29.031)
Okay, I’ll exit and come right back.
Chris Quinn (27:05.01)
See there.
Leila (27:06.414)
Where? I’m here.
Courtney (27:09.376)
Yeah, how’s the town? Okay.
Chris Quinn (27:10.674)
All right, that’s better. Okay.
The Ohio Supreme Court has agreed to handle a case that was big news when it happened, the killing of a Cleveland firefighter by a runaway driver. It was a terrible tragedy. The behavior was reckless beyond words, but the legal question, Layla, is not so simple. What will the court be deciding?
Leila (27:31.83)
Yeah, this case is heartbreaking and also very complicated. The Ohio Supreme Court has agreed to take up the legal fight over how to classify the 2022 death of Cleveland firefighter Johnny Tetrick. And the outcome could really have major implications for how prosecutors handle fatal driving cases across the state. Tetrick was killed on I-90 when Leander Bissell sped through a crash scene and hit him. It launched his body over 100 feet. Bissell was convicted of murder.
and sentenced to life with the chance of parole after 16 years. But a state appeals court threw that out. They said the evidence did not support a murder conviction, that Bissell was reckless, yes, but not knowingly trying to cause harm, which is the legal threshold for murder in Ohio. Now the state’s high court is being asked to settle that debate. Does knowingly speeding through a chaotic, partially blocked accident scene
where first responders are clearly present, meet the legal bar for murder, or does it fall short because there was no intent to kill? Prosecutors say the appeals court raised the bar too high, and if that ruling stands, it’ll make it harder to hold drivers accountable in similar tragedies. But the defense says that the murder charge was an overreach from the start, that this was a terrible accident, not an intentional act. So at the heart of this case isn’t just what Bissell did, but...
but how Ohio defines knowing behavior behind the wheel and where that line is between a tragedy and a crime.
Chris Quinn (29:06.14)
Yeah, I’ve long had a problem with some of the crimes that we use murder charges for. think of murder as the deliberate taking of somebody’s life. If it’s in the heat of the moment, it’s not first degree. But if it’s premeditated, it’s first degree. This guy, while he was reckless and deserved serious punishment, didn’t intend to kill anybody. It does seem like if it’s Manslaughter. It’s like if I’m in the if I’m with you.
Leila (29:15.597)
Yeah.
Chris Quinn (29:32.53)
and we’re committing a crime and you kill somebody, then I get charged with that murder. I’ve never accepted that that’s appropriate. It’s a state overreach. I’ve had many debates with our county prosecutor about this because he’s gung-ho, hit him with the worst. And everybody wanted justice here because this was horrible. guy, Tetrick, was by every count just a wonderful human being. But you shouldn’t corrupt the law.
Leila (29:40.462)
Hmm.
Leila (29:52.31)
Yeah. Beloved.
Chris Quinn (30:01.702)
for vengeance, should follow the law. And it does seem like this is what the appellate court did was right. Of course, you never know what our Ohio Supreme Court’s gonna do, because they really don’t base their decisions on the law.
Leila (30:03.66)
Yeah.
Leila (30:13.368)
Yeah, it feels hard to argue that Bissell had murderous intent here. I mean, he wasn’t aiming for anyone. It’s not like he would have circled back if no one got hurt, right? His actions were reckless, absolutely, but the idea that he knowingly set out to cause serious harm feels like such a stretch. you know, people do want accountability, especially when a first responder is killed in the line of duty. But stretching that definition of murder to fit the emotional weight of the tragedy,
feels like it risks blurring the legal lines that we rely on to distinguish between reckless and intentional conduct.
Chris Quinn (30:51.132)
Yeah, exactly. You’re listening to Today in Ohio. Lisa, we had a tragic incident happen almost outside our front window this week. Another example of someone with clear mental health issues, pretty much forcing police to kill him. What happened?
Lisa (31:06.879)
Yeah, there was a four hour standoff at the 480 and Tiedemann Road exit on Tuesday. It ended with a three car crash and the death of an innocent bystander and also the fatal shooting by police of the instigator, 45 year old Patrick Kerr of Cleveland. So this began about 11 o’clock. Parma Heights police tried to stop Kerr. He was driving his pickup and threatening suicide. It ended in a three car crash at Tiedemann Road right near the Plane Dealer printing plant.
and it resulted in the death of 62 year old Ronald Lisca of West Lake. So they actually had to use an armored vehicle to remove Lisca and the other crash victims while this was going on. Officers, you know, drew their guns and ordered Kerr to put his gun down after the crash happened. He placed the gun against his head several times. Four hours later, he exited the truck again with the gun in his hand and then he was shot dead by a SWAT officer.
So officers say Kerr has a known history of seeking suicide by cop, which is people doing things to provoke law enforcement officers into using deadly force against them.
Chris Quinn (32:14.002)
It’s a terrible thing because no police officer wants to kill somebody. But in that case, they don’t have a choice. This is right where our plant is in our newsroom. It’s our printing plant. They used, we have a very wide driveway for anybody that’s driven down Tiedemann Road. know what I’m talking about. That became the command center, completely blocked off. Nobody could come or go. Our building was on shutdown. And somebody who was in there said it was so unnerving. First, a drone.
was flying right outside the office window. We’re used to seeing Canada geese doing that, but not drones. But the most unnerving part is pretty much the entirety of this thing. A sniper was laying down in front of our building, trained on what was happening in case this guy became a threat and they were going to have to take him out. And that is not your normal workplace kind of thing. The police did a terrific job trying to keep this all from happening.
Lisa (32:45.153)
Hmm.
Chris Quinn (33:11.088)
But when the guy gets out of his car with a gun, it’s pretty much over. Again, I feel bad. The other thing that was really sad, this was one of the hottest days of the year. Those SWAT guys are covered in thick black stuff. They must have been dying of heat, just drinking water by the ton, hoping to bring this to an end peacefully. Just an ugly, ugly situation. You’re listening to Today in Ohio. Courtney, you’re off tomorrow, so I’m not letting you get away. You have to answer one more.
We have a pretty big fight brewing over parking and street flows around the treasured West Side Market. What’s the proposal that is causing so much consternation?
Courtney (33:51.328)
Well, we’re talking about RTA’s $50 million plan to turn West 25th Street around the market into four lanes of moving traffic. This is part of RTA’s now years long goal to build a bus rapid transit line similar to Euclid Ave along West 25th Street. But this plan has caused controversy because of the changes it would bring to the street itself. So right now, right around in that area, we have two driving lanes and a parking lane on each side.
This would do away with all the parking lanes in favor of, you know, shared bike and bus lanes that would give buses that right away to move quickly up and down the corridor. But while this might be a good transit goal and RTA sees big benefits to transit with this plan, local business owners are not so sure. Neither are nearby residents. And one of the concerns we’re hearing about is safety. Some business owners in the area say that those parking lanes
really currently serve as a buffer between pedestrians on the busy sidewalks there and the moving traffic. So they fear that doing away with it would get rid of kind of that safety buffer, especially in front of bars and restaurants where a lot of people are on foot. Also, you know, we’re hearing similar concerns from Sam McNulty. He owns Market Garden Brewery and other establishments in the area. He fears that forcing pedestrians to cross four lanes of moving traffic in this area
would also create dangerous conditions. got details about how there have been 15 pedestrian accidents or pedestrian or bicyclist accidents in that area since 2019. And folks are pushing back. There are folks from Mitchell’s Ice Cream, Ohio City Burrito, Old Angle Tavern, and the nonprofit that Mayor Justin Bipset up to run the West Side Market. They’re saying, whoa, whoa, whoa, hold on. We’ve got some concerns here and
For its part, Ohio City Inc, the development organization out there, says it’s on board with RTA’s plans, but it’s got specific conditions. It wants this project to meet, including physical separation between the bus and bike lanes and general traffic.
Chris Quinn (35:56.146)
You know, Sam McNulty has made a lot of investment out there. He’s been there a long time. If he’s got concerns about this, they should listen to him. I don’t think there’s many people over there that understand this dynamic better than him. And it’s hard not to agree that crossing four lanes, four open lanes is much more intimidating than crossing a couple. Having those cars parked on the side acts as traffic slowing. So I hope
some attention is paid. The folks that are out there day after day, they understand that neighborhood and it shouldn’t be just RTA running roughshod over a whole bunch of stakeholders out there that kind of understand it pretty well. I’ll be interested to see if this thing gets revised.
Courtney (36:42.914)
Yep, there’s been public meetings. have to see where the plans eventually land. you know, right now construction slated to begin in spring 2027. So we got at least a little bit of time to sort it out potentially.
Chris Quinn (36:55.514)
Alright, you’re listening to today in Ohio. Thanks Laila. Thanks Lisa. Thanks Courtney. Thank you for being with us. Will be back Friday to wrap up a week of news.