Showing posts with label Courts and The Law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Courts and The Law. Show all posts

Friday, September 13, 2013

Todd Zywicki on the $7.2 Billion Credit Card Settlement


Yesterday, U.S. District Judge John Gleeson heard arguments from retailers and the two big credit card companies, Visa and MasterCard, about a proposed settlement that would award retailers about $7.2 billion in their class action lawsuit. In anticipation of that hearing, Professor Todd Zywicki wrote an op-ed for Forbes arguing for the settlement. Zywicki argues that it would help end years of frivolous legislation from the retailers. In this video, I interview Professor Zywicki about his Forbes article and the details of the settlement.

Monday, October 29, 2012

J'Accuse... Chris Koster!

In October of 2010, I broke the story of racial discrimination suffered by Stephanie Patton at the hands of Missouri bureaucrats in the Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS):
Stephanie Patton, an African-American woman, opened Peace of Mind Adult Day Care in 1993. It was the first adult day care in the Show Me State to specifically cater to African-Americans. Most of Stephanie's clients are poor, so much of her funding came from Medicaid. She was driven out of business in 2009 by the combined forces of DSS, HealthNet, and DHSS. This entrepreneur employed ten people and the DHSS shut her down in the middle of a recession.

...

Here's what [Judge Chapel] wrote [emphasis added]:
Patton testified that Blum called her a "nigger" and said she was illiterate during the October 16, 2008 inspection. We consider this as a claim that DHSS's actions were the result of a racially discriminatory animus and that DHSS's actions deprived Patton of due process and equal protection of the laws, in violation of U.S. Const. amend. 5, 14 and 15, and Mo. Const. art. I, §§ 2 and 10.
While's there's much more, the main point is that the state of Missouri sued Stephanie for nearly a half million dollars of Medicaid fraud and lost. In addition, DHSS was found to have shown racially discriminatory animus toward her. The Missouri Court of Appeals for the Western District has a slightly different take on that aspect of the decision (full appeals court ruling).

Having lost the half million dollar Medicaid fraud case, Attorney General Chris Koster decided to harass Stephanie with a trumped up charge of stealing.

On January 4th, 2011, Koster's office filed criminal charges against Stephanie. The AG's office charged her with stealing less than $1,500. In essence, Koster's claim was that $1,500 of Medicaid payments that she had received were stolen. The AG's office held that because they didn't think she should be paid by Medicaid and yet she had been paid by Medicaid, that those payments constituted theft on her part. Basically, Attorney General Chris Koster alleged that the act of depositing checks was a criminal offense.

A warrant was issued for Stephanie's arrest.

She had lost her business and therefore her income as a result of her legal battle with DHSS. Her car had been repossessed. Stephanie's house was in foreclosure. She struggled to put together enough money for bail. Once she did, she turned herself in and spent a couple of hours in jail while being processed.

Stephanie could not afford an attorney, so she was represented by a public defender at a hearing in late February of 2011. At that hearing, the AG's office asked for a grand jury investigation. It seems odd to me that a grand jury would be impaneled for a case alleging the theft of less than $1,500. Understandably, Stephanie was both upset and depressed to be the subject of a grand jury investigation.

Through many dangers, toils, and snares she has already come sustained by her faith, family, and friends. Her faith found re-assurance on March 21st, 2011, as this chapter of her life, where she was unjustly branded a criminal by an over-reaching Attorney General, came to an end. At her hearing that Monday morning, the county prosecutor, representing the AG's office, asked the judge to dismiss the charges against Stephanie. The judge did exactly that.

Previously:

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

When the State Makes Working Illegal

Stephanie Patton In October of 2010, I reported on the decision in Peace of Mind Adult Day Care Center vs. Department of Social Services (DSS), et. al. At the heart of the decision was Judge Rod Chapel's finding that the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) had demonstrated "racially discriminatory animus" in their treatment of Stephanie Patton, an African-American woman who owned and ran Peace of Mind Adult Day Care Center.

Last week I reported that Missouri's Court of Appeals for the Western District had taken issue with Chapel's decision. In part, the Appeals Court ruled:
Evidence that a single agency employee made a racial remark to Patton is insufficient as a matter of law to support a conclusion that the entire agency thereafter acted in its handling of Patton with racial animus.
One of the side effects of the lawsuit during the two year appeals process was Stephanie's inability to find employment doing the work that she loves.

Stephanie spent over fifteen years running an adult day care service in Missouri. She is not only familiar with the business side of Medicaid, but also the day-to-day operations of caring for her client-patients. Adult day care providers have to be knowledgeable about a range of issues because they have to be able to address the healthcare needs of the people they see. Those needs can range from physical disabilities to psychological challenges in the social environment of the day care facility. Stephanie has the skills required; however, she was not been able to find work in her field.

While the state of Missouri is suffering with the worst unemployment in the region, Stephanie's skills are in an area that has continued to grow: healthcare. Early on in the appeals process, she had interviews with other adult day care providers and hospitals, but those potential employers turned her away. When potential employers checked her in the DHSS database, there was a warning not to hire her. She had been blacklisted.

At the suggestion of a relative, she contacted the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) in late June of 2011. DHSS responded with a letter indicating that she was now eligible to work for hospitals and other healthcare providers.

Why wasn't Stephanie ever notified of the fact that she had been blacklisted? Was an overzealous DHSS employee out for revenge after her court victory?

I think knowing this background to Stephanie's story, knowing what Stephanie went through, that's what makes the Appeals Court's ruling so disappointing to me. Judge Chapel's original finding that, not just an employee, but rather the Department of Health and Senior Services had demonstrated "racially discriminatory animus" towards Stephanie seems closer to the truth.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Revisiting Racism in Missouri's DHSS

Mitchell-Howard-Martin

In late October 2010, I reported on Stephanie Patton's legal victory in DSS, MO Healthnet Division, and DHSS vs Peace of Mind Adult Day Care. Judge Rod Chapel ruled in part that [emphasis added]:
...DHSS's actions were the result of a racially discriminatory animus and that DHSS's actions deprived Patton of due process and equal protection of the laws, in violation of U.S. Const. amend. 5, 14 and 15, and Mo. Const. art. I, §§ 2 and 10.
The state appealed the decision. In September of 2011, the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri, upheld Judge Chapel's decision in a terse one page judgment.

Harvey Tettlebaum The state appealed again and on August 8th, 2012, Judges Karen King Mitchell, Victor C. Howard, and Cynthia L. Martin of the Missouri Court of Appeals, Western District, heard the case. Harvey Tettlebaum of the law firm Husch Blackwell represented Patton at the appeals court hearing.

I attended the August 8th hearing and drew the sketches displayed here.

The Western District Court of Appeals handed down their ruling this past Tuesday (embedded below). In part they ruled:
We seriously question whether Patton raised her constitutional claim at the "first available opportunity." The complaints Patton filed with the DHSS did not include allegations -- either explicit or implied -- of DHSS acting with a discriminatory animus toward Patton. In fact, there is no evidence in the record as a whole that Patton ever registered a complaint or concern with DHSS that Blum had called her a racial epithet and illiterate. In contrast, the record as a whole leads to the inescapable conclusion that the first time this complaint was registered was during Patton's testimony. This does not appear to comport with the obligation to raise a constitutional claim at the first available opportunity. 
However, we are not persuaded that the Departments preserved an objection to Patton's late assertion of a constitutional claim. The Departments did not object to Patton's testimony as untimely. Instead, the Departments took the position at hearing that the AHC did not have "jurisdiction" to decide the constitutional issue being raised by Patton.17 See transcript at 169 ("[D]iscrimination is not something that, or constitutional issues are not something that this Commission has the jurisdiction over, and case law sets forth that the first notice to raise constitutional issues would be at the circuit court level,not at this level. And so by not testifying here they're not waiving their first availability to introduce evidence. The factual record would be made on the circuit court level where the court has jurisdiction over it."). This objection suggested that Patton was required to wait to assert her constitutional claim -- a position in inherent conflict with the position taken by the Departments on appeal[emphasis added]
In other words, the state argued "Heads--I win. Tails--you lose." Judges Mitchell, Howard, and Martin should be commended for calling the the state out on this. However, that Chris Koster's attorney would stoop so low to make contradictory arguments underscores the importance of replacing Koster with Ed Martin in November to restore a sense of justice to the Attorney General's office.

The ruling continues:
We need not determine whether Patton's testimony was sufficient to raise and preserve a constitutional claim or whether the AHC acted sua sponte in addressing the constitutional claim because we find in any event that the AHC's conclusion that DHSS acted with discriminatory racial animus toward Patton was legally erroneous. 
The AHC concluded that DHSS, as an agency, acted with a racially discriminatory animus toward Patton. The only evidence in the record to support this legal conclusion was the testimony by Patton that a single DHSS employee, Blum, directed a deplorable racial epithet toward Patton and called her illiterate. There was no evidence presented at trial that Blum's statements could be legally attributed to DHSS as a whole or that DHSS was even aware that the comments were made. Evidence that a single agency employee made a racial remark to Patton is insufficient as a matter of law to support a conclusion that the entire agency thereafter acted in its handling of Patton with racial animus. See James v. City of Jennings , 735 S.W.2d 188, 191 (Mo. App. E.D.1987). Even if the single (and wholly unacceptable) comment by Blum could be legally attributed to DHSS, standing alone that comment does not rise to the level of a constitutional violation in the absence of other evidence connecting the comment to subsequent agency action. DeWalt v. Carter , 224 F.3d 607, 612 (7th Cir. 2000) ("The use of racially derogatory language, while unprofessional and deplorable, does not violate the [U.S.] Constitution."); Blades v. Schuetzle , 302 F.3d 801, 805 (8th Cir. 2002) ("[W]e believe that the use of racially derogatory language, unless it is pervasive or severe enough to amount to racial harassment, will not by itself violate the fourteenth amendment."). The AHC erred in finding otherwise. 
The Departments do not argue that the AHC's error in finding that the DHSS acted with racially discriminatory animus requires reversal of all other conclusions reached by the AHC affecting DHSS. And in any event, as we have already discussed, the AHC's conclusion claimed to be erroneous in the Departments' fifth points relied on is defensible, independent of the AHC's finding on Patton's constitutional claim. Thus, although we agree with that the AHC committed legal error in finding that DHSS acted with racial animus toward Patton thus violating her constitutional rights, that conclusion was harmless. [emphasis added]
Stephanie PattonI had to laugh at that last bit. Surely Judges Mitchell, Howard, and Martin know full well that had they sustained Judge Chapel's finding that DHSS acted with racially discriminatory animus the budgetary damage from the resulting civil rights lawsuit would cause plenty of harm. Maybe they were being ironic.

I can understand why the judges do not feel that the evidence proves the culpability of DHSS; however, I think their conclusion rests on the assumption that this is an isolated incident. If a civil rights suit is brought against the state--as I believe it should be--we will see whether that assumption is correct.

The actions of Missouri's regulatory agencies had a devastating effect on Patton. Her business was shutdown. Her car was repossessed. Her home was foreclosed on. And so much more.

Yeah. There's still racism in America. It's in our government.

Patton is a modern day civil rights hero.

But there's also a problem with out of control regulations and bureaucracies. Because regulations weigh more heavily on small businesses like Patton's; because regulations can and do destroy small businesses, it is no wonder that we live in a world dominated by large corporations. It's only the large crony capitalist companies that can weather a hostile regulatory environment.


Friday, June 29, 2012

Video: St. Louis Tea Party Protest Obamacare Ruling


The St. Louis Tea Party held a rally to protest the Supreme Court's decision to uphold Obamacare on the evening the ruling was handed down. Speakers included Michelle Moore, Bill Hennessy, Stephanie Rubach, and the Gateway Pundit. Included in the video playlist above:

Monday, May 7, 2012

David McIntosh's Residency Issues Do Not End on Election Day

David McIntosh is the latest in a string of Republican politicians in Indiana to face questions over his residency. As I blogged in February, Indiana's Secretary of State Charlie White was convicted of six felony counts stemming from the fact that he used the address of his ex-wife while they were going through a divorce. Indiana's senior Senator, Dick Lugar, has faced scrutiny over the fact that he moved to Virginia in 1977. Ultimately, Lugar has been ruled ineligible to vote from the home he sold thirty-some years ago. He's now registered to vote from a family farm.

Greg Wright has retained Jon Sturgill of Eagle & Fein Attorneys & Counselors at Law to help press the case against David McIntosh. Wright was instrumental in bringing Lugar's residency issues to the fore. Wright represents an important aspect of the specialization of the Tea Party movement. Far from being dead, the movement has turned a corner with experts using skills developed over a life-time--or, in some cases, recently acquired--to drive positive, conservative political change.

Wright and Sturgill prepared the following chronology of David McIntosh's residences which they submitted to Madison County (Indiana) Prosecutor Rodney Cummings. Wright and Sturgill contend that McIntosh committed vote fraud and perjury, so while McIntosh's eligibility for the US House is a catalyst, their case is really about whether McIntosh committed vote fraud and/or perjured himself. (Their supporting exhibits are not included below because those documents include personal information which may not be appropriate for dissemination online.)

McIntosh Chronology

The short version is that David McIntosh lost his reelection bid to represent Indiana in Congress in 2000. At that time, he lived in Virginia. Having lost reelection, he was no longer on business for the state of Indiana, so  his Indiana residency lapsed. McIntosh has worked as a lawyer and lobbyist for about a decade, but now is running to replace Dan Burton in Indiana's 5th Congressional District. McIntosh has a Virginia drivers license, a million dollar home in Virginia, wife and family in Virginia, a million dollar house in Florida, and he's using the address of a friend's home in Indiana for his voting address. To acquire his Virginia drivers license, McIntosh had to sign under penalty of perjury that he's a resident of Virginia.

Despite appearing to reside in Virginia, McIntosh voted in Indiana in 2008 and 2010. When confronted about his residency by WISH TV's Jim Shella, McIntosh sandbagged and ultimately walked away. Wright and Sturgill have filed a complaint with Indiana's Secretary of State, Connie Lawson (complaintletter to SoS Lawson). An investigation by the Secretary of State's office will not be completed until after the primary tomorrow. Sturgill, on behalf of Wright, has also written to Madison County Prosecutor Rodney Cummings (letter to Cummings) and the Madison County Election Board (letter to the board).


McIntosh realized that his residency might present a problem, so he had his attorney contact Cummings last July asking the prosecutor for his opinion. Cummings wrote a sort of "get-out-of-jail-free" letter in McIntosh's favor stating, in part [emphasis added]:

the factual summary and history you offer provides, in my judgement a compelling argument rebutting any asserting that Mr. McIntosh is not a bonafied resident of Madison County, Indiana.
Whether or not one is eligible to run for a particular office in Indiana is determined in part by whether or not one is a "resident of" a particular jurisdiction; however, Indiana has a stricter "resident in" standard. To vote in the Hoosier State one must meet the "resident in" standard. David McIntosh does not appear to meet that standard. Advance Indiana discusses the distinction in greater detail.



Regardless of how Hoosier's vote in Indiana's Fifth Congressional District Republican primary, Greg Wright plans to pursue the charges of vote fraud and perjury against McIntosh. As that unfolds in the courts and news over the coming months, McIntosh will have to deal with some embarrassing questions. How does he reconcile having signed his name to the fact that he's a Virginia resident to acquire his driver's license with his claim that he's an Indiana resident? Has he filed Indiana income taxes as required by law for the period he's lived in Virginia? And why did the Madison County prosecutor take the extraordinary step of advocating for McIntosh's residency?

Hoosier Republicans should carefully consider McIntosh's opponents in the primary voting booth tomorrow. It's a big field, but I'd take a look at Dr. John McGoff and Susan Brooks as worthy alternatives to the politically damaged McIntosh.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Reason TV's Wrap-up of the Obamacare Arguments at the Supreme Court



From the YouTube description:
"If I was in the Obama administration, I would not be comfortable with how the last three days went." 
Reason's Damon Root was in attendance for the third and final day of oral arguments before the Supreme Court on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), which focused primarily on the issue of severability, which brings into question whether the individual mandate be excised from the law, or if the law in its totality must be struck down.
Reason has also assembled a playlist of their recent videos about the case now pending before the Supreme Court of the United States.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Justice for Sale in St. Louis County

My inaugural post at Andrew Breitbart's Big Government. Here's an excerpt:
On the first day of the trial, Gateway Pundit noted that union supporters were out in force to intimidate Gladney. In the courtroom, the defense planned to turn the court fight into a he-said, she-said because the prosecution did not have video of how the fight started. The defense also argued that McCowan and Molens had a right to self-defense, but that rests on the belief that Gladney instigated the confrontation.
Thanks to Dana Loesch and Mike Flynn for the invite!

24thState is asking important questions about the defense's witness:
As we pointed out years ago, there were no other witnesses to the beginning of the assault. The two people closest were Cheryl Johner (who pled guilty to assault of Kelly Owens), and the ponytailed man in jeans seen standing over McCowan in the opening sequence of the video. Neither testified.

Instead, there was a defense witness, still unnamed, who claims to have seen the beginning of the altercation. She was decribed as heavyset, with a cane.

Do you mean this woman? The one seen walking into the scene after the assault had taken place? The woman who slowly moves forward and who gets to the scene after David Brown (blue shirt), who did not see the initial assault? This is the witness?

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Allegation that Dominque Strauss-Kahn's Accuser was a Hotel Hooker

Dominique Strauss-Kahn's accuser wasn't just a girl working at a hotel -- she was a working girl.

The Sofitel housekeeper who claims the former IMF boss sexually assaulted her in his room was doing double duty as a prostitute, collecting cash on the side from male guests, The Post has learned.

"There is information . . . of her getting extraordinary tips, if you know what I mean. And it's not for bringing extra f--king towels," a source close to the defense investigation said yesterday.

If the allegation that DSK's accuser was turning tricks while cleaning rooms at the Sofitel stands, then DSK will walk. While the prosecution maintains that there's "unambiguous evidence" that evidence seems only to support that there was some sort of sexual encounter between the two. The NY Post article continues:

Twenty-eight hours after the alleged sexual assault, the woman talked to her boyfriend in an immigration jail in Arizona -- saying "words to the effect of, 'Don't worry, this guy has a lot of money. I know what I'm doing,' " The New York Times quoted an official saying.

It certainly looks like DSK was the victim of a shakedown, since the woman's sex drive appears to be motivated by money. This will feed the conspiracy theorists. They'll argue that she was paid to do this by DSK's enemies. So, it looks like DSK is on the fast track for the French Presidency.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Dominique Strauss-Kahn Could Walk, Accuser's Credibility Questioned

Media_httpwwwinmalafi_dwkyb

The sexual assault case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn is on the verge of collapse as investigators have uncovered major holes in the credibility of the housekeeper who charged that he attacked her in his Manhattan hotel suite in May, according to two well-placed law enforcement officials.
Although forensic tests found unambiguous evidence of a sexual encounter between Mr. Strauss-Kahn, a French politician, and the woman, prosecutors do not believe much of what the accuser has told them about the circumstances or about herself.

It's important to maintain your credibility if you're going to accuse someone of rape even when there's "unambiguous evidence". Since DSK's accuser is seeking asylum, I wonder if her vanishing credibility will get her a one-way ticket back home. Wow. Just... wow.

Meanwhile, China's Xinhua is reporting that the IMF has moved on: First female IMF chief receives praise from former hometown of Chicago:

CHICAGO, June 28 (Xinhua) -- French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde made history Tuesday by becoming the first female managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and her appointment received wide praise in Chicago, where she once served as chairman of one of the world's largest law firms.

Monday, June 27, 2011

US Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts on Social Media

Chief Justice John Roberts comments on social media. Included in his remarks, "I don't think any of us [Justices] have a Facebook page or tweet, whatever that is. But technology is making inroads." These comments were given during the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals Annual Conference. See the complete program, via C-SPAN: A Conversation with Chief Justice Roberts.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Video: As American as the No Knock Raid

WARNING: video contains graphic images of police shooting people and pets.


"No Knock Raid," written and performed by Toronto-based musician Lindy, is a searing indictment of one of the most aggressive, ubiquitous, and mistaken tactics in the War on Drugs.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Dominique Strauss-Kahn Initially Claimed Diplomatic Immunity

When Dominique Strauss-Kahn was arrested at John F. Kennedy airport last month on his way out of the country, police said he initially told them "I have diplomatic immunity." 

When police asked him to show his papers, he answered: “It’s not in this passport, I have a second passport. Can I speak with someone from the French Consulate?”  

Strauss-Kahn’s statements are contained in a Voluntary Disclosure Form given by prosecutors to defense lawyers and filed by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance on Thursday.

Doesn't his claim of diplomatic immunity undermine his case? I mean, isn't a jury (or judge) more likely to believe that he was trying to hide something? I guess we'll see.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Will the Courts Stop Obamacare?

Law gavel

Three U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals are poised to render decisions on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in the coming months. Despite hundreds of briefing pages and numerous oral arguments, government lawyers have yet to address the law's most basic constitutional infirmity. Only a "general police power"—the right to enact laws alleged to be in the public interest without regard to interstate commerce or some other federal legislative authority—can support the law's centerpiece, the "individual mandate" that all Americans purchase health insurance. The Constitution denies that power to the federal government, reserving it to the states alone.

In enacting the individual mandate, Congress purported to rely on its power to regulate interstate commerce and, in the process, reach individuals who are already engaged in that commerce. But the individual mandate does not regulate commerce, interstate or otherwise. It simply decrees that all Americans, unless specially exempted, must have a congressionally prescribed level of health-insurance coverage regardless of any economic activity in which they may be engaged. Requiring individuals to act simply because they exist is the defining aspect of the general police power that Congress lacks.

There are so many reasons why it's a bad idea to vest a "general police power" with the Federal government. Healthcare is just one of them. Of course, it remains to be seen whether or not the courts will grant this power to DC.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Supreme Court Voids Ruling Against Pennsylvania Town's Immigration Law

Media_httpwwwamerican_bemav

 

In light of the Court’s 5-3 decision validating the right of state and local governments to impose penalties on employers who hire illegal aliens, the high court vitiated a ruling against a similar ordinance passed by government officials in Hazleton, Pennsylvania.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Video: Former IMF Chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn Pleads: "Not Guilty"

While Rep Weiner was busy admitting his guilt and apologizing to Andrew Breitbart, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the former head of the IMF, was pleading "not guilty".


Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the former International Monetary Fund head charged with trying to rape a Manhattan hotel maid formally said he was innocent of the charges.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Best Quote about Supreme Court Order Requiring Prisoner Release in California

Walter Russell Mead: SCOTUS Makes It Official: California A Failed State: "...when you produce so many criminals that you can’t afford to lock them up, you are a failed state."

Friday, May 27, 2011

Video: The Government's War on Cameras--Photography is NOT a Crime

 

Who will watch the watchers? In a world of ubiquitous, hand-held digital cameras, that's not an abstract philosophical question. Police everywhere are cracking down on citizens using cameras to capture breaking news and law enforcement in action.

Monday, May 23, 2011

St. Louis Judge Provides Object Lesson in Conservatism for the Missouri GOP

State bills in Missouri's General Assembly to curtail red light cameras came up short in the recent legislative session, but there's good news in St. Louis!

According to KMOX, Judge Mark Neill has thrown out red-light camera laws in St. Louis.

The 22nd Judicial Circuit Court judge ruled there was no state legislation to enable the red-light cameras in the city.  The cameras, which earned the city approximately $3 million each year in revenue through $100 fines, are no longer valid in the City of St. Louis due to Neill's ruling.  

Officials from the city have not commented on whether the ruling will be appealed.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Video: State Rep Paul Curtman on H.B. 708 American Laws for American Courts


State Rep Paul Curtman (R) talks about H.B. 708, American Laws for American Courts. The bill failed to pass in the 2011 Missouri General Assembly. Had it passed it would have assured Missourians that their rights as guaranteed by the US Constitution and the Missouri Constitution could not be compromised via the application of foreign or international law.

Curtman also discusses the legislative process from when the bill was introduced, through the House committee, and over to the Senate where it died.