News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Tax deduction for gambling losses proposed in North Carolina | North Carolina
SUMMARY: Legal betting for the Super Bowl between the Eagles and Chiefs is projected to reach $1.5 billion, marking North Carolina’s first experience with legal wagers. Rep. Erin Paré proposes a bill allowing sports gambling losses to be deducted on taxes, aligning state law with federal standards. Known as House Bill 14, this legislation would be retroactive to January 1, 2024, and is likely to pass due to bipartisan support. Currently, two taxpayers can have equal taxable winnings despite differing net outcomes. North Carolina has generated over $5 billion in wagers, yielding over $105 million in state revenue to date.
The post Tax deduction for gambling losses proposed in North Carolina | North Carolina appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Cross-country storm set to bring more snow to Northeast
SUMMARY: The Tennessee Highway Patrol is investigating tornado damage in Deer Lodge, urging people to avoid the area. In Kentucky, an EF1 tornado caused destruction in Hart County, while a wintry mix affected New England, leading to multiple accidents on I95. Massachusetts Turnpike faced tractor-trailer incidents, and Connecticut officials warned about maintaining safe distances on the roads. Pennsylvania reported stranded vehicles amid approaching storms expected to bring significant snowfall to Minnesota and Wisconsin, with winter storm watches issued for parts of New York and New Jersey. In California, heavy rains caused landslides, resulting in two fatalities and dramatic rescues. Meanwhile, the South experienced record-high temperatures.
![YouTube video](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/b8T20TqdPBA/hqdefault.jpg)
The storm that brought heavy rain and mountain snow to the West Coast is making the trek across the country to bring a significant snowstorm to the Northeast this weekend.
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Griffin case heads back to trial court where it all started
‘Democracy being defended.’ Griffin case comes full circle while entering a new chapter
RALEIGH — Over 100 people stood in a line wrapped around the 10th floor of the Wake County Courthouse on Friday — an hour before Jefferson Griffin made his latest attempt to remove over 60,000 voters from the count in the Republican’s continual bid for a seat on the state’s highest court.
Some held bright green slips of paper declaring, “My vote matters.” Others debated how the N.C. Supreme Court may rule on the case, where it is expected to eventually return. Very few made it into the packed courtroom, whose maximum capacity was fewer than 60 people.
The court hearing marked the latest chapter in what seems to be an endless saga. And as Griffin pushes for a decision that’s in his favor, others are pushing back.
Outside, protesters stood on the courthouse steps for about an hour, holding signs, chanting “Every vote counts” and taking turns adressing the crowd.
Lily Levin was on a Fulbright scholarship in Chile when she voted overseas, and said she wasn’t surprised to find that her ballot was being challenged by Griffin.
“I think it’s the cynicism of growing up in a state that has been so extremely gerrymandered,” Levin explained. “My vote might be disenfranchised right now, that’s what we’re fighting for, but so many other people’s votes have been disenfranchised for so long.”
How we got here
After losing to Democratic Supreme Court Justice Allison Riggs by 732 votes, Griffin filed a series of election protests to remove three categories of voters from the count.
The first implicates 5,509 military and overseas voters who did not attach any photo identification to their ballot. The State Board of Elections contends that North Carolina law does not include these people in the recently implemented voter ID law. Griffin argues that the election board incorrectly interpreted the legislature’s intent when allowing these voters to cast ballots without photo ID.
The second protest challenges 267 overseas voters who have never resided in North Carolina but are permitted to vote in the jurisdiction their parents were last eligible under state law. Griffin asserts that this law violates the state constitution’s residency requirement, and therefore should not have been followed.
The third and maybe most significant protest challenges 60,273 voters who Griffin alleges are unlawfully registered to vote since their registration was accepted without a driver’s license or social security number due to a faulty voter registration form. The State Board of Elections says that voters can’t be punished for clerical errors, and had to take extra steps to prove their identity if they did not include either number under the federal Help America Vote Act.
While the arguments are unique to each category, they fall along the same themes. Griffin believes that the State Board of Elections violated North Carolina law or the state constitution in each case by accepting these votes.
On the other hand, the election board asserts the law was followed as it stood on Election Day, and that retroactively removing voters’ ballots from the count is unconstitutional.
Since December, Griffin’s election protests have tracked a convoluted journey through state and federal courts. Now, the case is back at the beginning: trial court.
The Wake County Superior Court is expected to rule in Riggs’ favor. Appeals are anticipated afterward.
Most expect the case to eventually return to the N.C. Supreme Court, where three justices have indicated they would deny Griffin’s request to remove votes from the count, two have shown a more positive reception and one has not shared his thoughts.
Certain elements of the case remain under the jurisdiction of federal courts, but won’t come into play unless certain questions remain unresolved by the time the parties exhaust their state court options.
Until then, the race holds an unusual distinction as the final election that has not been certified in the country.
Griffin goes after voters
When Denise Carman moved back to Chatham County from Alamance County in 2020, she filled out a voter registration form. She did not include a driver’s license or social security number. Carman doesn’t know why, but she does know that she was allowed to vote every year since. Carman even served as a Chatham County election official.
Now, she is one of 26 impacted voters named as a defendant in the lawsuit.
“I’m very frustrated that myself and others have been called out,” she said. “I’m part of the lawsuit because I know this won’t deter me in the future, and I worry that if this is just allowed to happen, that it will deter people from voting — other people who aren’t as engaged in the process.”
Felix Soto is also named in the suit. Soto, 18, was determined to participate despite being in Costa Rica for a fellowship. Solo requested a ballot, and included a photocopy of a passport just in case, but was informed by his local county board of elections that it wasn’t necessary. So when Soto resubmitted the ballot due to unrelated clerical issues, the photo ID was left out.
Now, Griffin wants Soto’s ballot removed because of that.
“That was a slap in the face because I worked so, so hard to get my ballot in with all the different back and forth,” Soto recalled. “And my parents worked so hard, too. They’re so proud of me — that I am a voter, that I worked to have my voice heard — and this entire kerfuffle is an affront to all that I have worked for.”
Griffin’s ‘baseless claims’
Not all voters have an equal chance of appearing on Griffin’s protest lists. For one, he only challenged those who voted early or by mail.
Additionally, youth voters between the ages of 18 and 25 are over three times as likely to have their ballots challenged than those over 65, according to Duke’s Student Voting Rights Lab analysis.
A disproportionate number of the 60,000 challenged because of their voter registration were people of color, unaffiliated voters or those who opted not to include their race, gender or ethnicity on their voter registration, according to a separate analysis conducted by Western Carolina University political science professor Chris Cooper.
![](https://carolinapublicpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/IMG_7761-copy-766x404.jpg?crop=1)
Griffin’s protest concerning overseas voters only included people from four largely Democratic counties: Durham, Forsyth, Buncombe and Guilford.
Audrey Megis has spent her entire life and career working to uplift Asian American voices like her own. She’s frustrated that after a record turnout for Asian American and Pacific Islander voters, Griffin is “attempting to cut those numbers down.”
“I’m tired of candidates using my vote as a pawn in their political game and entertaining these baseless claims,” she said.
Two years ago, Tanner Willeford watched as his wife sang “America the Beautiful” during her naturalization ceremony at the North Carolina State Fairgrounds.
It was the culmination of a “long, difficult process” that took thousands of dollars, five years of paperwork and interviews, Willeford said.
After this year’s election, Willeford’s wife found out she was one of the voters on Griffin’s protest list.
“To finally get the chance to vote after all that and then have it be challenged? It was crushing,” Willeford said Friday outside of the courthouse.
Lori Barker stood in for her loved one on the courthouse steps. Her partner, a physician, had to work, she explained. They found out his vote was challenged after a Facebook friend posted about unexpectedly being on the list and encouraged everyone to check.
“The spin in the news was that they were illegal votes, and it never would have occurred to me that he would have been one of the disenfranchised voters,” Barker said.
After combing through the list, Barker found three other people she knew on her county’s list. She confirmed that they all voted in person with a valid photo ID.
Barker teared up as she spoke about her 9-year-old daughter, who still “believes in the goodness of the world.”
“I want her to grow up in a country of democracy,” she said. “This is not about my candidate winning or my issue winning; it is about the democracy being defended. And unless we fight for it, I feel like it won’t exist in the future.”
This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Man charged in 2023 slaying of dog at Asheville pickleball courts could be released Monday • Asheville Watchdog
The man charged in the stabbing death of a pet dog while its owner played pickleball will have a sentencing hearing Monday in Buncombe County that could lead to his release.
James Wesley Henry has been in Broughton Hospital, a state psychiatric facility, for treatment since April. Henry, who has a lengthy criminal history, was charged with a lower level, class H felony of cruelty to animals, which carries a maximum sentence of 39 months for an offender with multiple convictions.
The 11-year-old mixed breed named Beignet was stabbed to death June 26, 2023, at Weaver Park while the dog’s owner played pickleball with friends.
Buncombe County District Attorney Todd Williams said Friday that he could not comment on a pending matter.
“At the sentencing hearing Monday morning, the state will present its argument for appropriate sentencing,” Williams said.
North Asheville residents Tom and Liesbeth Mackie owned Beignet. Tom Mackie said Thursday that an assistant district attorney had contacted them to let them know about the hearing, and that Henry most likely will be released.
“I feel absolutely awful, and I’m concerned about other people,” Mackie said. “I think the laws need to change. I mean, people are walking in fear, and not just from this guy — from all kinds of violent people that get turned out.”
Mackie said the country as a whole needs more mental health care, and he acknowledged that sending someone like Henry to prison could worsen his struggles.
‘Can someone like this be rehabilitated?’
“But can somebody like this be rehabilitated?” Mackie said, referring to Henry’s criminal history.
The Mackies hope that if Henry is released, he will move back to Morganton, about 60 miles east of Asheville and where his mother is from. Liesbeth Mackie said she has concerns for the public’s safety but also for Henry himself, because the case stirred such outrage and passion from the community.
Liesbeth Mackie said she talked to her son recently about Henry’s potential release, and he told her, “Mom, you don’t want vigilantes and pitchforks.”
“And I thought, ‘That’s exactly what I don’t want,’” Liesbeth Mackie said.
Liesbeth Mackie was playing pickleball at Weaver Park when Henry was seen attacking Beignet, who was leashed and lying in the shade. Initially, witnesses thought Henry was punching the dog, but he actually had a knife in his hand.
![](https://i0.wp.com/avlwatchdog.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Screenshot-2023-06-26-at-10.03.16-PM.png?resize=780%2C713&ssl=1)
Before the incident, Henry had been in and out of jail more than two dozen times, and Asheville police knew him as far back as 2010 because of his violent behavior.
Asheville Watchdog has previously reported that Henry, 45, was homeless at the time of the incident and prone to alcohol-fueled volatility. Henry served briefly in the military, but his mother told The Watchdog that he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and has a drinking problem.
Last April, a judge ruled that Henry would go to Broughton Hospital for mental health treatment.
Williams previously noted that Henry lacked the “capacity to proceed to trial” and would be sent to Broughton Hospital “for further evaluation and restoration services,” according to the district attorney’s office. Broughton Hospital is a regional state psychiatric hospital in Morganton.
The Buncombe County Public Defender’s Office represented Henry in the hearing. Sam Snead, head of the office, said last year that technically, “restoration” means the accused could be treated and restored to a mental health capacity where he could stand trial.
Typically, the treating hospital sends the court updates on the treatment, usually every six months, Snead said then.
“If restoration can’t happen within a year, a year and a half, they’ll often say, ‘Well, they’re not restorable,’” Snead said. “They’re balancing the nature of the crime regarding the potential restoreability. So if you’ve committed murder, they may be willing to keep you in the hospital for a decade or more before they deem you unrestorable.”
Snead said if a judge makes a ruling of non-restorability, at that point the prosecution cannot proceed and the court would likely dismiss the case. Snead said the district attorney also can review the restorability updates and decide to dismiss the case.
“And then the other (factor) is if the person has served essentially the maximum amount of time that they can serve for the charge, regardless of their restoreability, then there’s also a mechanism by which the charges can get dismissed,” Snead said last year.
Technically, “restoration” means the accused could be treated and restored to a mental health capacity where he could stand trial, Snead said last year, but he added that he did not expect this case to go to trial.
The Watchdog left messages for Snead on Friday but did not hear back by deadline. Snead did not handle the Henry case personally.
Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. John Boyle has been covering Asheville and surrounding communities since the 20th century. You can reach him at (828) 337-0941, or via email at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org. The Watchdog’s local reporting during this crisis is made possible by donations from the community. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/.
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The post Man charged in 2023 slaying of dog at Asheville pickleball courts could be released Monday • Asheville Watchdog appeared first on avlwatchdog.org
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