* 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)
Gov. Beverly Perdue signed another batch of bills Friday afternoon leaving five remaining unsigned bills on her desk.
The six remaining are:
HB 104: Clarifies which documents produced by lawmakers are exempt from the public records law. Would make requests by lawmakers sent to state agencies exempt from the public records law.
HB 945: The Studies Act of 2009 catalogues a host of items and issues to be studied while the legislature is out of session.
HB 1166: Insurance Law Changes. Makes several changes including a new requirement that to get a license, insurance agents must submit fingerprints for a criminal background check.
SB 947: Provides more opportunity for a homeowner to halt foreclosure if he or she can demonstrate they can pay what is owed.
HB 836: Makes technical corrections to the state budget.
HB 1329: Consolidates various state stautes regulating criminal record expunctions.
Among the 40-plus Perdue signed Friday are:
SB 167: Prohibits tobacco products and cell phones in prisons. Makes it a crime to provide tobacco or cell phones to inmates.
HB 667: Allows wineries to sell wine during business hours.
SB 138: Bans the recreational use of salvia divinorum, an hallucinogenic herb. Still allows the mint-like plant to be used in landscaping.
SB 786: Authorizes capital projects on University of North Carolina system campuses. The projects have a funding stream to repay debt for the projects. List includes $21.8 million for a parking deck at N.C. State University, a $10 million renovation of the Carolina Inn at UNC-Chapel Hill, $35 million for a Partnership, Outreach and Research for Accelerated Learning Building at UNC-Charlotte.
SB 464: Requires statistics on race to be kept to help identify and prevent racial profiling by law enforcement. Also requires that a law enforcement officer ensure a child is in safe hands if the child's parent gets arrested. The last provision would have prevented a case last year in which three children were stranded on Interstate 85 in the middle of the night for eight hours when a sheriff's deputy arrested the children's mother, an illegal immigrant.
Correction: Perdue had six bills to sign, not five as we previously reported. Dome regrets the oversight.
Gov. Beverly Perdue has signed 59 of 108 bills on her desk as of this morning.
Perdue has 49 more bills to go, reports Gerry Cohen, the legsislature's bill drafting director on his Drafting Musings blog. The legislature left the pile of bills for Perdue, who by law, has 30 days to sign or veto them. The state has no pocket veto, so if the bills aren't signed by Sept. 11, they become law.
Cohen is keeping a running tab of bills signed.
The new laws increase state oversight for fireworks display operators, establish tougher rules for using handicapped parking placards, ensure sex offenders can't drive a school bus and allow magistrates to carry a gun in a courthouse.
Still to be signed are bills that would make online bullying a misdemeanor, ban recreational use of an hallicinogenic herb, and ban smoking and cell phones in prisons.
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.
What has the Senate passed by crossover?
Here are some of the more interesting bills that made it past the upper chamber before the deadline to be considered by the House:
S.B. 138: Ban hallucinogenic herb Salvia divinorum
S.B. 1062: Allow judges to include custody of pets in a domestic protective order
S.B. 1018: Prohibit stores on the Outer Banks from using plastic bags
S.B. 11: Allow district attorneys and assistant D.A.'s to carry concealed weapons in courthouses
S.B. 307: Regulate venomous or constricting pet snakes
S.B. 167: Ban cell phones and tobacco in state prisons
More after the jump.
A few more interesting Senate bills filed:
S.B. 158: Modify Felony Death by Vehicle Penalty, Sen. Phil Berger
S.B. 160: Students Under 16 May Attend Comm. College, Sen. Phil Berger
S.B. 161: Execution / Physician Assistance Authorized, Sen. Phil Berger
S.B. 164: Unauthorized Practice of Medicine / Felony, Sen. James Forrester
S.B. 167: No Smoking / Cell Phones on Prison Grounds, Sen. Charlie Albertson