Indiana
Letter to the editor: A misguided attack on Indiana’s public libraries
I am writing to strongly oppose Indiana Senate Bill 283, introduced by Sen. Gary Byrne (District 47), which proposes stripping public libraries of their autonomy by transferring their governance and operations to county governments. This bill is a direct threat to the stability and effectiveness of library services that Hoosiers depend on daily.
Public libraries are not mere book warehouses; they are critical providers of tailored services such as early literacy programs, technology access, local education initiatives, and rural Internet connection. Centralizing control under county governments will stifle this responsiveness, replacing effective local governance with bureaucratic inefficiency.
The proposed timeline is absurd. Expecting counties to take over library assets, liabilities and operations by mid-2025 will cause chaos, disrupt vital services and saddle counties with massive transition costs and responsibilities they are ill-equipped to handle. The financial and logistical fallout will far outweigh any imagined benefit.
Indiana’s public libraries thrive because they operate independently, grounded in the needs of their communities. Senate Bill 283 dismisses this proven model in favor of a reckless, ill-conceived overhaul that serves no one.
I urge lawmakers to reject this harmful legislation and protect one of Indiana’s most valuable public institutions.
— John D. Moore
Lafayette, Indiana
Indiana
Indiana to reconsider iGaming in 2025
Indiana has joined the ranks of US states that will take a fresh look at online gambling legislation aiming to authorize and regulate the market segment during 2025. Indiana State Rep. Ethan Manning, a long-time backer of online gambling expansion in the state, has introduced House Bill 1432, an omnibus measure of gambling-related topics, including the approval of online poker and other casino-style online games.
Manning has sponsored or backed several previous gambling measures, the last of those coming in 2023 with his House Bill 1536. Manning’s new measure, HB 1432 (2025), had been teased earlier in January but was finally introduced on Tuesday, then immediately assigned to the House Committee on Public Policy, which Manning chairs.
Manning is also the sponsor of a second bill regarding charitable-gaming initiatives that will also receive early-year attention before his committee. Both gaming-related bills are scheduled for initial discussion on Tuesday, January 28.
iGaming returns to Indiana’s legislative debates
In 2023, Indiana had been considered one of the US states most likely to approve online poker. The state had been a relatively early adopter of online sports betting, and iGaming in Indiana appeared ripe for a similar run toward approval. However, a prominent corruption scandal involving another gambling-expansion proponent sent the state into a cool-off period, legislatively speaking, and Manning’s once-promising bill was allowed to expire and an informal moratorium on the topic went into place for all of 2024.
The issue, which lawmakers believed put a temporary taint on iGaming in Indiana, was the charging of one-time State Rep. Sean Eberhart as part of a scheme to benefit Spectacle Gaming, a former provider of off-track betting services at a small number of northern Iowa venues.
As part of the scheme, Eberhart lobbied and advocated for slashing or eliminating fees connected to two gaming licenses to be acquired by Spectacle. In return, Eberhart accepted the promise of a future position with the company with an annual salary of $350,000. In late 2023, Eberhart agreed to plead guilty and was ultimately sentenced to a fine and a prison sentence of year and a day.
Indiana
Avian influenza detected in waterfowl in multiple Indiana counties
Indiana
Pardoned Jan. 6 defendant from Indiana still in Canadian custody
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) – A Hoosier convicted for his role in the January 6 Capitol riot is still being detained in Canada, despite a pardon from President Donald Trump.
The United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia filed a motion to dismiss charges against Antony Vo, this week, citing President Trump’s sweeping pardon to all January 6 defendants.
Vo was a student at IU Bloomington when he joined the “Stop the Steal” rally in Washington, D.C. that turned into a riot at the U.S. Capitol. A federal judge ordered Vo to serve nine months in prison after he was convicted on charges for nonviolent offenses.
Claiming his prosecution was politically motivated, Vo refused to report to prison.
Instead, he escaped to Canada last year to seek asylum. After spending more than six months going through the refugee process, the Canada Border Services Agency arrested Vo on Jan. 6, 2025 (the four-year anniversary of the Capitol attack), telling News 8 there was no record of him entering the country legally.
Robert Tibbo, the attorney representing Vo in Canada, told News 8 that Canada’s minister of public safety has advised immigration officials that Vo was not actually pardoned for his Jan. 6 convictions.
“It’s that excuse that’s being used in part to detain him,” Tibbo said, stating Vo’s detainment is “unlawful.”
If Vo rescinds his refugee application, Canadian authorities will most likely send him back to the U.S., according to Tibbo.
So, why not stop the refugee process and return home?
President Trump’s pardon covers “offenses related to events that occurred at or near the United States Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.” This month, federal prosecutors filed a new charge against Vo for failure to surrender. It’s not clear if the pardon covers the latest charge, though Tibbo believes it will be dismissed. So, Vo is waiting until it’s certain he won’t face arrest before attempting a return to the U.S.
Even before receiving a pardon from President Trump, Vo was outspoken in his belief the Jan. 6 prosecutions were “politicized and corrupted.” News 8 was the first to interview Vo about his prosecution, but he went on to speak to reporters for the New York Times and international outlets in Canada.
“Whenever one puts themselves in the public spotlight as Antony has done, you can become an easier target, and I think that’s a reality,” Tibbo said. “I’ve had American clients in the past, and it was a similar situation.”
Tibbo previously represented whistleblower Edward Snowden.
“But I think Antony’s result in the end is going to be a very positive one,” Tibbo said.
Now, despite having a pardon in the U.S., Vo is still detained in Canada with a hearing on his refugee status planned on Wednesday.
Antony’s mother, Annie Vo, was with her son on Jan. 6, 2021, and also faced charges for the Capitol riot. A judge dismissed Annie’s charges on Tuesday, citing the President’s pardon.
Since escaping his prison sentence in the U.S., Vo has come to believe a government conspiracy caused the chaos during the certification of the 2020 presidential vote. He has called for members of the Jan. 6 committee to be imprisoned and said the actions of U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan, who presided over his case and others, amounts to treason.
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