Federal judges ordered Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost to stop blocking a measure that asks voters to ban qualified immunity for police and other government employees, but he plans to appeal, he said Thursday.
Yost said heβd seek a review by the full U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati after a divided panel issued its decision Wednesday, reversing a lower federal court ruling. The constitutional amendment would end qualified immunity, allowing people to sue over claims that police or government workers violated their constitutional rights.
The panel ordered the Republican attorney general to forward the proposal to the GOP-majority Ohio Ballot Board, which would decide if it represents one or more constitutional amendments. Once thatβs determined, organizers could start gathering about 413,000 valid signatures of registered voters needed to qualify for the ballot. They face a July 3 deadline to file their petitions to get the question on the Nov. 5 ballot.
Yost has repeatedly rejected the petitionsβ proposed summary language as not being a fair and accurate representation of what the measure would do. The panel found his actions constituted a βsevere burdenβ on organizers when it comes to communicating with voters and meeting the filing deadline. They also rejected Yostβs argument that the case belongs to the Ohio Supreme Court.
Yostβs office issued a statement Thursday noting that the appeals court panel didnβt decide whether his decision on the summary language was correct. They said the request for a full court review would likely be filed Friday.
βIf Attorney General Yostβs decision was correct, then the panelβs order is sending an unfair, untruthful summary out to present to voters,β said Bethany McCorkle, the officeβs communications director. βOhio has a compelling interest in a fair and truthful process.β