- Posted September 19, 2011
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Court Roundup
Ohio
Ex-prosecutor who took on Larry Flynt to retire
CINCINNATI (AP) -- A sheriff and ex-prosecutor who took on Larry Flynt in a case depicted in a movie about the Hustler magazine publisher will retire after a 40-year career as an elected official in Cincinnati.
Simon Leis told The Cincinnati Enquirer he won't run next year for another term as Hamilton County sheriff, a job he has held since 1987.
He was the county prosecutor who obtained a 1977 obscenity conviction against Flynt that was overturned on appeal. In the movie "The People Vs. Larry Flynt," Republican Leis was portrayed by Democratic political strategist and commentator James Carville.
As sheriff, Leis backed the county's 1990 obscenity prosecution of an art museum for a display of homoerotic photographs by Robert Mapplethorpe. A jury acquitted the museum and its director of obscenity-related counts, and the exhibit hit record attendance numbers.
Leis also served as a common pleas court judge before becoming sheriff and handily winning re-election every four years.
The 77-year-old Leis has been unhappy with pressure by county officials to slash his budget, and with unsuccessful efforts to get funding to relieve jail overcrowding. In recent years, he also has butted heads repeatedly with GOP officials.
He said his chief deputy since 1997, Sean Donovan, will run for sheriff in 2012. Hamilton County Democrats hope to have a strong challenger for the office.
Nebraska
State Supreme Court orders new trial in 2009 murder
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -- The Nebraska Supreme Court ordered a new trial for a 19-year-old Omaha man because of a problem with the instructions given to the jury that convicted him of first-degree murder.
The court issued its ruling Friday in Trevelle Taylor's case. Taylor was sentenced to life in prison for his role in the 2009 gang-related shooting death of 20-year-old Justin Gaines.
Officers found Gaines mortally wounded in a bullet-riddled car parked in a driveway. He had been shot in the back.
The court said the jury was improperly encouraged to presume part of Taylor's guilt because he tried to persuade one of the prosecution's witnesses not to testify against him.
The court rejected Taylor's other concerns about certain evidence that was allowed at trial.
Published: Mon, Sep 19, 2011
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