Speed Trap Exchange
Jurisdiction | Colman, South Dakota |
Speed Trap Location | Highway 34 |
Nearest Reference Point | n/a |
GPS Coordinates | n/a |
Time of Day | Any time |
Level of Enforcement | High |
Type of Enforcement | Radar |
Date | 2/2002 |
The speed limit drops from 65 to 45 to 35 mph on east and west sides of town. Barney likes to sit by the substation on the west side of town and by the city park on the east side..... | |
Comment (05/2008): http://madvilletimes.blogspot.com/2007/08/ag-long-colman-breaks-law-but-doesnt.html Friday, August 17, 2007 AG Long: Colman Breaks Law, But Doesn\'t Commit Crime? Evidently pre-occupied with a million-dollar libel suit, that Sioux Falls newspaper follows the Madville Times and Madison Daily Leader in covering the speedtrap scandal in Colman. Melanie Brandert does some good homework, speaking to Attorney General Long and crunching numbers on just how much money the City of Colman kept from kids and cops [Melanie Brandert, \"Police Chief: I Was Unfairly Fired,\" that Sioux Falls newspaper, 2007.08.17]. From the Attorney General, we get a rather odd legal opinion: Colman officials did not commit a crime, and it is uncertain whether the state could reprimand or penalize the city in some way, Long said. \"This is sort of unplowed ground, and we\'re trying to figure it out,\" he said. \"This thing is kind of unusual.\" We certainly hope city officials not following state law is unusual. But since when does not following state law not constitute committing a crime? AG Long may be playing definition games in his comments for the press. His private communications to the City of Colman must have included sterner stuff: Assistant City Attorney Jim Billion gave the city an opinion on whether it was permissible to divert payment of fines for violating local ordinances to the city in a May 29 letter to Colman Finance Officer Gloria Van Duyn. He wrote that the practice appears permissible but warned the city would be responsible for enforcement and collection of tickets and would have to file tickets with the court clerk when contested. Then, after Attorney General Larry Long intervened, Billion reversed his advice in a June 11 letter to Van Duyn. \"In revising this issue in light of some additional authority, I now hold the opinion that violations of city ordinance should be filed with Clerk of Courts,\" he said. \"It doesn\'t appear the state will seek to collect on tickets and fines retroactively, however, the practice of issuing city tickets on SD 34 should discontinue.\" It sounds like Billion was willing to facilitate the city\'s game as long as nobody higher up the chain of command noticed or made a fuss. When \"additional authority\" did get wind of Colman\'s monkey business, Billion turned his yes to a no. How instructive it would be to hear that early June communication between Long and Billion.... Brandert gives us a good breakdown of the money involved in what AG Long considers a non-crime: For example, former chief Brion Kimball would charge $35 out of a $79 speeding ticket from 6 to 10 mph over the limit to speeders on Highway 34 in Colman, Schlueter told Epp in an e-mail. The remaining $44 is for costs and surcharges for violating a state statute. \"Hence nothing went to the school districts or law enforcement training and various other funds,\" he told his lawyer. Costs of $40 are designated for law enforcement and judicial expenses for personnel, training and facilities provided by the state, as well as special funds such as victim compensation. The state lost $46,640 in the 2004 and 2005 federal fiscal years, and part of 2006 until May - when Kimball left to become police chief in Centerville. With Flandreau schools having 73.6 percent of students in the county, it lost as much as $30,040 in the 2004 to 2006 federal fiscal years through May. Colman-Egan lost about $9,117. Brookings, Chester Area, Dell Rapids, Elkton and Rutland also lost money. Flandreau Superintendent Rick Weber said he would need to study the issue further before commenting. Colman-Egan Superintendent Roger Fritz did not return calls for comment. Seven school districts robbed of $46,640 over two fiscal years. Multiply that figure out over nine years, and Colman breaks the $200,000 mark in moneys not collected or remitted to the state. Let\'s see: if a farmer doesn\'t pay his property tax to the county, that\'s a crime. If a South Dakota business fails to collect and remit sales tax to Pierre, that\'s a crime. If you fail to write a check to the IRS on April 15, that\'s a crime. In every one of those cases, the government knows exactly what to do: it sends the sheriff or the marshal or the lawyer to get the money (or you... or both!). Yet the City of Colman shorts the state thousands of dollars, and the Attorney General of South Dakota stands there scratching his head trying to figure out what to do? Readers, the floor is open for suggestions.... | |
Comment (05/2008): http://madvilletimes.blogspot.com/2007/08/colman-speeding-tickets-not-kosher.html Tuesday, August 21, 2007 Colman Speeding Tickets Not Kosher More evidence that Colman\'s ex-police chief Matt Schlueter was right to refuse to continue previous ticketing practices on Highway 34: The City of Colman had created its own ticket form that deviated significantly from that prescribed by South Dakota Codified Law. First, let\'s look at the power of attorney \"authorization card\" Colman was issuing when it hired Matt Schlueter in May: Note that the form explicitly directs those pleading guilty to return the card and listed fine to the City of Colman, at Colman City Hall. The Moody County Clerk of Courts was only to be contacted by those pleading not guilty. Now, let\'s take a look at the portion of the official state ticket that serves as a power of attorney form, as specified by SDCL 23-1A-2 and SD Administrative Rule 2:03:01:03: This form directs the defendants and their money to the County Clerk of Courts, regardless of the intended plea. The state form makes no provision for directing the money to any other agency. Now SDAR 02:01:03:03 says \"The following form, or any other form that substantially complies with it, shall be used for offenses included on the schedule of offenses adopted pursuant to SDCL 16-2-21 and where a power of attorney option is provided.\" One may argue over the exact meaning of \"substantially complies,\" but this writer bets that substantial compliance probably includes instructions on where defendants should send their money. City Assistant Attorney Jim Billion\'s reversal of opinion on the issue in June seems to support that bet. Remember, the issue here isn\'t whether Colman runs a speed trap. Colman\'s city police have the right -- wait, their duty is to catch every lawbreaker in town. If they could catch every no-good leadfoot (you all know who you are) zooming through that peaceful burg, then more power to them. The important issues here are the following: 1. Was Colman violating state law by pocketing speeding fines and thus denying county schools and law enforcement training the funding they were due? The above documents strengthen the case that the city did. 2. Did Colman fire Officer Schlueter just because he wanted to follow the law? If either or both of these questions is answered affirmatively, then how and when will the City of Colman be held accountable? School superintendents, police officers, and Highway 34 commuters eagerly await the answer. | |
Add a comment | |
Jurisdiction | Colman, South Dakota |
Speed Trap Location | State Highway 34 |
Nearest Reference Point | city park Drive |
GPS Coordinates | n/a |
Time of Day | Any time of day |
Level of Enforcement | Some |
Type of Enforcement | Radar, Laser |
Date | 2/2005 |
Speed limit drops from 65 to 45 MPH, but the center few blocks through this small town it drops again to 35 MPH. East side of town a squad car will hide by the City Park. West side of town a squad car will hide in the industrial complex parking lot on the North side of the road. | |
Comment (05/2008): http://madvilletimes.blogspot.com/2007/08/ag-long-colman-breaks-law-but-doesnt.html Friday, August 17, 2007 AG Long: Colman Breaks Law, But Doesn\'t Commit Crime? Evidently pre-occupied with a million-dollar libel suit, that Sioux Falls newspaper follows the Madville Times and Madison Daily Leader in covering the speedtrap scandal in Colman. Melanie Brandert does some good homework, speaking to Attorney General Long and crunching numbers on just how much money the City of Colman kept from kids and cops [Melanie Brandert, \"Police Chief: I Was Unfairly Fired,\" that Sioux Falls newspaper, 2007.08.17]. From the Attorney General, we get a rather odd legal opinion: Colman officials did not commit a crime, and it is uncertain whether the state could reprimand or penalize the city in some way, Long said. \"This is sort of unplowed ground, and we\'re trying to figure it out,\" he said. \"This thing is kind of unusual.\" We certainly hope city officials not following state law is unusual. But since when does not following state law not constitute committing a crime? AG Long may be playing definition games in his comments for the press. His private communications to the City of Colman must have included sterner stuff: Assistant City Attorney Jim Billion gave the city an opinion on whether it was permissible to divert payment of fines for violating local ordinances to the city in a May 29 letter to Colman Finance Officer Gloria Van Duyn. He wrote that the practice appears permissible but warned the city would be responsible for enforcement and collection of tickets and would have to file tickets with the court clerk when contested. Then, after Attorney General Larry Long intervened, Billion reversed his advice in a June 11 letter to Van Duyn. \"In revising this issue in light of some additional authority, I now hold the opinion that violations of city ordinance should be filed with Clerk of Courts,\" he said. \"It doesn\'t appear the state will seek to collect on tickets and fines retroactively, however, the practice of issuing city tickets on SD 34 should discontinue.\" It sounds like Billion was willing to facilitate the city\'s game as long as nobody higher up the chain of command noticed or made a fuss. When \"additional authority\" did get wind of Colman\'s monkey business, Billion turned his yes to a no. How instructive it would be to hear that early June communication between Long and Billion.... Brandert gives us a good breakdown of the money involved in what AG Long considers a non-crime: For example, former chief Brion Kimball would charge $35 out of a $79 speeding ticket from 6 to 10 mph over the limit to speeders on Highway 34 in Colman, Schlueter told Epp in an e-mail. The remaining $44 is for costs and surcharges for violating a state statute. \"Hence nothing went to the school districts or law enforcement training and various other funds,\" he told his lawyer. Costs of $40 are designated for law enforcement and judicial expenses for personnel, training and facilities provided by the state, as well as special funds such as victim compensation. The state lost $46,640 in the 2004 and 2005 federal fiscal years, and part of 2006 until May - when Kimball left to become police chief in Centerville. With Flandreau schools having 73.6 percent of students in the county, it lost as much as $30,040 in the 2004 to 2006 federal fiscal years through May. Colman-Egan lost about $9,117. Brookings, Chester Area, Dell Rapids, Elkton and Rutland also lost money. Flandreau Superintendent Rick Weber said he would need to study the issue further before commenting. Colman-Egan Superintendent Roger Fritz did not return calls for comment. Seven school districts robbed of $46,640 over two fiscal years. Multiply that figure out over nine years, and Colman breaks the $200,000 mark in moneys not collected or remitted to the state. Let\'s see: if a farmer doesn\'t pay his property tax to the county, that\'s a crime. If a South Dakota business fails to collect and remit sales tax to Pierre, that\'s a crime. If you fail to write a check to the IRS on April 15, that\'s a crime. In every one of those cases, the government knows exactly what to do: it sends the sheriff or the marshal or the lawyer to get the money (or you... or both!). Yet the City of Colman shorts the state thousands of dollars, and the Attorney General of South Dakota stands there scratching his head trying to figure out what to do? Readers, the floor is open for suggestions.... | |
Comment (05/2008): http://madvilletimes.blogspot.com/2007/08/colman-speeding-tickets-not-kosher.html Tuesday, August 21, 2007 Colman Speeding Tickets Not Kosher More evidence that Colman\'s ex-police chief Matt Schlueter was right to refuse to continue previous ticketing practices on Highway 34: The City of Colman had created its own ticket form that deviated significantly from that prescribed by South Dakota Codified Law. First, let\'s look at the power of attorney \"authorization card\" Colman was issuing when it hired Matt Schlueter in May: Note that the form explicitly directs those pleading guilty to return the card and listed fine to the City of Colman, at Colman City Hall. The Moody County Clerk of Courts was only to be contacted by those pleading not guilty. Now, let\'s take a look at the portion of the official state ticket that serves as a power of attorney form, as specified by SDCL 23-1A-2 and SD Administrative Rule 2:03:01:03: This form directs the defendants and their money to the County Clerk of Courts, regardless of the intended plea. The state form makes no provision for directing the money to any other agency. Now SDAR 02:01:03:03 says \"The following form, or any other form that substantially complies with it, shall be used for offenses included on the schedule of offenses adopted pursuant to SDCL 16-2-21 and where a power of attorney option is provided.\" One may argue over the exact meaning of \"substantially complies,\" but this writer bets that substantial compliance probably includes instructions on where defendants should send their money. City Assistant Attorney Jim Billion\'s reversal of opinion on the issue in June seems to support that bet. Remember, the issue here isn\'t whether Colman runs a speed trap. Colman\'s city police have the right -- wait, their duty is to catch every lawbreaker in town. If they could catch every no-good leadfoot (you all know who you are) zooming through that peaceful burg, then more power to them. The important issues here are the following: 1. Was Colman violating state law by pocketing speeding fines and thus denying county schools and law enforcement training the funding they were due? The above documents strengthen the case that the city did. 2. Did Colman fire Officer Schlueter just because he wanted to follow the law? If either or both of these questions is answered affirmatively, then how and when will the City of Colman be held accountable? School superintendents, police officers, and Highway 34 commuters eagerly await the answer. | |
Comment (05/2008): http://madvilletimes.blogspot.com/2007/08/ag-long-colman-breaks-law-but-doesnt.html Friday, August 17, 2007 AG Long: Colman Breaks Law, But Doesn\'t Commit Crime? Evidently pre-occupied with a million-dollar libel suit, that Sioux Falls newspaper follows the Madville Times and Madison Daily Leader in covering the speedtrap scandal in Colman. Melanie Brandert does some good homework, speaking to Attorney General Long and crunching numbers on just how much money the City of Colman kept from kids and cops [Melanie Brandert, \"Police Chief: I Was Unfairly Fired,\" that Sioux Falls newspaper, 2007.08.17]. From the Attorney General, we get a rather odd legal opinion: Colman officials did not commit a crime, and it is uncertain whether the state could reprimand or penalize the city in some way, Long said. \"This is sort of unplowed ground, and we\'re trying to figure it out,\" he said. \"This thing is kind of unusual.\" We certainly hope city officials not following state law is unusual. But since when does not following state law not constitute committing a crime? AG Long may be playing definition games in his comments for the press. His private communications to the City of Colman must have included sterner stuff: Assistant City Attorney Jim Billion gave the city an opinion on whether it was permissible to divert payment of fines for violating local ordinances to the city in a May 29 letter to Colman Finance Officer Gloria Van Duyn. He wrote that the practice appears permissible but warned the city would be responsible for enforcement and collection of tickets and would have to file tickets with the court clerk when contested. Then, after Attorney General Larry Long intervened, Billion reversed his advice in a June 11 letter to Van Duyn. \"In revising this issue in light of some additional authority, I now hold the opinion that violations of city ordinance should be filed with Clerk of Courts,\" he said. \"It doesn\'t appear the state will seek to collect on tickets and fines retroactively, however, the practice of issuing city tickets on SD 34 should discontinue.\" It sounds like Billion was willing to facilitate the city\'s game as long as nobody higher up the chain of command noticed or made a fuss. When \"additional authority\" did get wind of Colman\'s monkey business, Billion turned his yes to a no. How instructive it would be to hear that early June communication between Long and Billion.... Brandert gives us a good breakdown of the money involved in what AG Long considers a non-crime: For example, former chief Brion Kimball would charge $35 out of a $79 speeding ticket from 6 to 10 mph over the limit to speeders on Highway 34 in Colman, Schlueter told Epp in an e-mail. The remaining $44 is for costs and surcharges for violating a state statute. \"Hence nothing went to the school districts or law enforcement training and various other funds,\" he told his lawyer. Costs of $40 are designated for law enforcement and judicial expenses for personnel, training and facilities provided by the state, as well as special funds such as victim compensation. The state lost $46,640 in the 2004 and 2005 federal fiscal years, and part of 2006 until May - when Kimball left to become police chief in Centerville. With Flandreau schools having 73.6 percent of students in the county, it lost as much as $30,040 in the 2004 to 2006 federal fiscal years through May. Colman-Egan lost about $9,117. Brookings, Chester Area, Dell Rapids, Elkton and Rutland also lost money. Flandreau Superintendent Rick Weber said he would need to study the issue further before commenting. Colman-Egan Superintendent Roger Fritz did not return calls for comment. Seven school districts robbed of $46,640 over two fiscal years. Multiply that figure out over nine years, and Colman breaks the $200,000 mark in moneys not collected or remitted to the state. Let\'s see: if a farmer doesn\'t pay his property tax to the county, that\'s a crime. If a South Dakota business fails to collect and remit sales tax to Pierre, that\'s a crime. If you fail to write a check to the IRS on April 15, that\'s a crime. In every one of those cases, the government knows exactly what to do: it sends the sheriff or the marshal or the lawyer to get the money (or you... or both!). Yet the City of Colman shorts the state thousands of dollars, and the Attorney General of South Dakota stands there scratching his head trying to figure out what to do? Readers, the floor is open for suggestions.... | |
Comment (05/2008): http://madvilletimes.blogspot.com/2007/08/colman-speeding-tickets-not-kosher.html Tuesday, August 21, 2007 Colman Speeding Tickets Not Kosher More evidence that Colman\'s ex-police chief Matt Schlueter was right to refuse to continue previous ticketing practices on Highway 34: The City of Colman had created its own ticket form that deviated significantly from that prescribed by South Dakota Codified Law. First, let\'s look at the power of attorney \"authorization card\" Colman was issuing when it hired Matt Schlueter in May: Note that the form explicitly directs those pleading guilty to return the card and listed fine to the City of Colman, at Colman City Hall. The Moody County Clerk of Courts was only to be contacted by those pleading not guilty. Now, let\'s take a look at the portion of the official state ticket that serves as a power of attorney form, as specified by SDCL 23-1A-2 and SD Administrative Rule 2:03:01:03: This form directs the defendants and their money to the County Clerk of Courts, regardless of the intended plea. The state form makes no provision for directing the money to any other agency. Now SDAR 02:01:03:03 says \"The following form, or any other form that substantially complies with it, shall be used for offenses included on the schedule of offenses adopted pursuant to SDCL 16-2-21 and where a power of attorney option is provided.\" One may argue over the exact meaning of \"substantially complies,\" but this writer bets that substantial compliance probably includes instructions on where defendants should send their money. City Assistant Attorney Jim Billion\'s reversal of opinion on the issue in June seems to support that bet. Remember, the issue here isn\'t whether Colman runs a speed trap. Colman\'s city police have the right -- wait, their duty is to catch every lawbreaker in town. If they could catch every no-good leadfoot (you all know who you are) zooming through that peaceful burg, then more power to them. The important issues here are the following: 1. Was Colman violating state law by pocketing speeding fines and thus denying county schools and law enforcement training the funding they were due? The above documents strengthen the case that the city did. 2. Did Colman fire Officer Schlueter just because he wanted to follow the law? If either or both of these questions is answered affirmatively, then how and when will the City of Colman be held accountable? School superintendents, police officers, and Highway 34 commuters eagerly await the answer. | |
Add a comment | |