* Mobile phones can make their way into state prisons in hollowed-out books and hidden inside tennis balls tossed over fences.
Often, they're smuggled in to inmates by prison employees looking to make quick cash.
Now guards caught smuggling mobile phones or cigarettes to inmates could find themselves locked up. A new law signed Friday by Gov. Beverly Perdue makes it a crime to sell or give state inmates wireless communications devices or tobacco products, punishable by up to 120 days in jail.
Correction Secretary Alvin W. Keller Jr. was among several leaders across the country who recently signed a petition to the Federal Communications Commission, seeking permission to scramble mobile phone signals in prisons. (N&O)
* A two-day hearing for a Cary man who claims he's innocent of killing a Raleigh prostitute nearly 18 years ago will be open to the public.
Nash County Superior Court Judge Quentin Sumner, the chairman of the N.C. Innocence Inquiry Commission, decided to grant a request to open a hearing concerning the 1993 murder conviction of Greg F. Taylor.
Taylor, convicted of charges in the death of a prostitute, maintains his innocence. The hearing is the third case to come before the state's innocence commmission. (N&O)
* Perdue says the state has not ruled out Las Vegas-style card games at Harrah's Cherokee Casino.
The state and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians have no ongoing negotiations, said Perdue, who was in Jackson County on Monday for the grand opening of Sequoyah National Golf Club.
The Eastern Band has long sought state approval for live gambling. The casino is limited to video gambling machines and digital blackjack with a live dealer. A bitter exchange between then-Gov. Mike Easley and Hicks in 2006 followed an abrupt end to negotiations between the tribe and state.
The tribe estimates an expansion would bring $35 million in state taxes and an annual payroll of $100 million a year. (AC-T)
A bill that would ban the possession and use of tobacco products and cell phones in state prisons received final legislative approval today and is on its way to the governor's desk.
The prison smoking ban comes at the request of the N.C. Sheriffs' Association, which asked that a statewide smoking ban in some public areas be extended to prisons.
The cell phone component grew out of a story in The News & Observer that highlighted problems that have occurred in North Carolina and other states when inmates have used cell phones to set up attacks on each other, coordinate escapes and continue to run illegal enterprises outside of prison.
The ban passed the House on Wednesday despite objections that it was another blow to the tobacco industry, which has taken major hits this year with the statewide ban in bars and restaurants and a tax increase in the state budget.
Cell phones and tobacco would be banned in state prisons under a bill the Senate approved by a 40 to 8 vote Monday night.
The legislation would require visitors and employees at correctional institutions to lock cell phones and tobacco in their cars.
"It's designed to help protect the health of our inmate population," said Sen. Charlie Albertson, a Duplin County Democrat, "and to make our prisons more secure."
* Burley Mitchell tells N.C. Lawyers Weekly that a panel hopes to recommend U.S. attorneys and District Court judges to U.S. Sen. Kay Hagan by the end of May.
* U.S. Rep. Sue Myrick wants to make sure that people don't start using their cell phones on airplanes, notes recent experience with rude passenger.
* House bill to require parents or guardians to give written permission before a child could be spanked in school passes 91-24, heads to Senate.
* State Rep. Jimmy Love was not aware of a Facebook group with more than 8,000 members supporting his bill to end the high school graduation project.
The N.C. House adopted a bill that would make it a misdemeanor to give or sell a cell phone to an inmate.
The bill is in response to reports that cell phones have been found in prisons, including twice on death row. An earlier version of the bill made passing cell phones to inmates a felony.
Lawmakers reduced the penalty because they didn't want to make it even tougher for prison guards who would already be fired to find another job, said Rep. Ronnie Sutton, a Pembroke Democrat.
Also sending a former guard to prison puts the guard in danger and makes it tougher for the state to deal with a dire shortage of prison beds, Sutton said.
The bill passed the House 117 to 0. It next goes to the Senate.
* House committee says bill to limit texting while driving may be too broadly written. Would it forbid using an iPod or checking your calendar?
* No, U.S. Rep. Howard Coble was not at the meeting at Yalta. That's a joke photo put together by someone on Rep. Walter Jones' staff.
* Progressive bloggers are already starting to discuss what they should do about U.S. Rep. Heath Shuler and his potential Senate run.
* U.S. Sens. Richard Burr and Kay Hagan, Reps. Jones and G.K. Butterfield urge Environmental Protection Agency to accept PCS Phosphate's plan to expand.
Which state bills have the most support?
Recent surveys by the Elon University Poll, the conservative Civitas Institute and the Democratic firm Public Policy Polling have shown broad agreement on a number of issues.
Below, the percentage in support and the corresponding bill:
H.B. 361: Defense of Marriage (76 percent, Civitas)
S.B. 155: Community College Can't Admit Illegal Aliens (74 percent, PPP)
H.B. 88: Healthy Youth Act (69 percent, PPP)
H.B. 2: Prohibit Smoking in Public & Work Places. (67 percent, Elon; 64 percent PPP)
S.B. 12: Ban Mobile Phone Use While Driving (66 percent, Elon)
H.B. 35: Independent Redistricting Commission (55 percent, Civitas)
Correction: A previous version of this post included S.B. 161, which would overturn the moratorium on the death penalty. Polling data is conflicted on this issue, so it has been removed from the list.
More state Senate bills of note:
S.B. 376: Honor Jim Long, Sen. Tony Foriest
S.B. 377: Low Academic Performance/No Sports, Sen. Charlie Albertson
S.B. 378: Counties May Fund Charter Schools, Sen. Eddie Goodall
S.B. 379: Remove Cap on the Number of Charter Schools, Sen. Goodall
S.B. 380: Collection of Mobile Phone Data/DMV Reports, Sen. Charlie Dannelly
What does North Carolina think?
The latest Elon University Poll shows significant agreement on a number of issues that are before the legislature.
Below, the percentage who agreed with a sentiment:
77: The state should make commuter rail available in urban areas.
74: The state should not charge a fee based on miles driven each year.
67: The state should ban smoking in public places, such as restaurants and bars.
— Support a $2 billion bond referendum for bridges and roads.
66: Offshore drilling should be allowed off the coast of North Carolina.
— Except in emergencies, it should be illegal to use a cell phone while driving.
The live phone poll of 758 residents was conducted Feb. 22-26. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points.
After the jump, the rest of the results.
* Bill would create a study commission on licensing and regulating midwives. The state currently only allows nurse midwives with degrees.
* Greensboro blogger Ed Cone notices that U.S. Sen. Kay Hagan has finally upgraded her official Senate Web site, something he's been pushing for a while.
* A bill to ban cell phone use while driving appears dead after members of the Senate Commerce Committee appear particularly unenthused about it.
* House Health Committee is expected to consider a bill that would ban smoking in restaurants and public places in a meeting today.