City Attorney, Shawn Tornow, puts the ‘ASS’ in ‘ASININE’.
In a daylong hearing, Dan Daily’s lawyer tried to paint a picture of the city’s record-keeping on code violations as haphazard and its enforcement as selective.
It has taken Dan several years to get to this point because the city attorney, Tornow and the court have been in cahoots to keep delaying the trial in hopes Dan would give up or run out of money.
Assistant City Attorney R. Shawn Tornow, in his questioning of witnesses, countered that Daily was given adequate notice that a driveway extension on his property violated city zoning ordinances, and the four citations he eventually was issued were meant to get Daily to comply.
And that’s the sticking point. The code violations they cited to Dan, have NOTHING to do with the driveway extention. It would be like running a red light and a cop giving you a ticket for speeding.
The idea that Daily and his lawyer were provided an incomplete file for the trial is “asinine,” Tornow said.
Interesting language. Are we getting a little frustrated, Shawn, because someone is challenging your Kangaroo Kourt – As Dan’s lawyer points out;
Daily’s lawyer, Charles Dorothy, questioned witnesses Tuesday about how the city assembles its code enforcement and appeals files from various agencies. Dorothy questioned why witnesses did not keep documents related to citations or the appeals process and other hearings.
In the shredder, that’s how the city ‘FILES’ stuff they want no one to see. Kind of like my Visual Arts Commission application, that ‘mysteriously’ disappeared on my first attempt.
The code enforcement process has been scrutinized for a lackluster collection system and criticized by some as difficult and confusing. If Daily wins, the controversial administrative rules could be declared unconstitutional under both state and U.S. constitutions, and the process would have to undergo substantial changes.
They are Unconstitutional because they deny due process, just like the red light cameras.
Daily maintains that the process in Sioux Falls deprives residents of basic rights because they are not allowed to subpoena witnesses; the burden of proof is on those who appeal a ruling; and there are no formal rules of evidence.
At one point during the hearing, Dorothy asked city code enforcement officer Brad Hartmann why he did not cite the other 10 homes on Daily’s block that had similar driveway extensions.
Hartmann said he had received a complaint about Daily’s property, and he indeed had cited a neighbor for a driveway extension. Hartmann also said he was not aware which, if any, of the other properties had obtained variances or were in the process of trying to get them.
Like I have been saying all along ‘selective’ code enforcement by the city is unacceptable. Like I have said in the past, if you are truly not following code the city should be able to enforce it. But they cannot tell a property owner what they can and cannot do because they ‘think’ you might be doing something wrong. That is not the purpose of code.
Something interesting to point out is that Dan received this violation shortly after he wrote a letter to the editor being critical of the city’s red light cameras. Coincidence? Also, officer Hartmann got his job with the city after ‘leaving’ the Highway Patrol. Hartmann was one of the investigators of the Janklow / Scott accident. Dan’s lawyer has attempted to get information on whether Hartmann quit from the Hi-Po or was dismissed. Hopefully it will come out in the trial. I guess he left the department shortly after the investigation . . . interesting thought for us conspiracy theorists.
Hopefully Dan will come on here today and give us more deets about the hearing.