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The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page A1

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
A1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

got away with it. Tom Brady did. So did the Patriots. They got away with it, all of them, because what they did was cheat the Colts in the AFC championship ame. And what they won was the Super Bowl.

Cheaters never win? Tell hat to Brady and Bill Beli chick and that recidivist rules-breaking rganization they call the New England Patriots. They won big. Hell, they won it a ll. Brady has been suspended for the first four games of the 2015 season, and the Patriots have been docked $1million and ne draft choice in each of the next two drafts a first-rounder in 2016, a fourth- rounder in 2017 and none of it means anything compared to that ill-gotten Lombardi Trophy in Foxborough and those uper Bowl rings being worn by Belichick, Brady and the rest of them. In the NFL, the Super Bowl is the ultimate goal, the only goal.

Everything else is a detail. suspension? A detail. ut that letter Monday from NFL Vice resident Troy Vincent to the New England organization id you see it? Did you see this sentence, which is enough to make you realize that in Roger NFL, cheaters really do win? Gregg Doyel Sports columnist COMPLETE COVERAGE, 1C Tom Brady set to return vs. Colts on Oct. 18; ow this stacks up against other punishments.

THE LESSON: CHEATERS DO WIN THE SPIRIT OF THE LORD IS, THERE IS II COR. 3:17 STATEEDITION RETAIL $1.00 WEATHER LOW: 52 HIGH: 65 usty winds, cooler than ormal. Details, 12A Castroneves may be nailed for avoidable contact in race. 1C That first-lap crash ould lead to penalties STORMS TEAR THROUGH ORNADO ALLEY The twisters were the latest in a string of recent deadly storms. 1B Business 4B Classified 10-11A Comics 3-4E Deaths 8-9A Editorials 13A Lottery A2 Scores 6C Stocks 4A, 5B MLB 5C Puzzles 1-3E An outside audit of the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles released Monday revealed a sweeping lack of oversight a nd accountability and the possibility of 16 new overcharges that could result in more refunds for Hoosier motorists.

The findings come in the wake of a long string of internal problems, includ- i ng the overcharging of BMV customers by at least $60 million. The reportprepared by accounting irm BKD reinforced a host of systemic shortcomings and failures uncovered by a pair of lawsuits and an Indianapolis tar investigation over the past year. The findings include: fee problems: Twenty-six newly identified, potentially inaccurate fees 10 undercharges and 16 overcharges that could result in additional efunds. Tim Evans and Tony Cook tim.evans@indystar.com Among problems found: 16 potential overcharges BMV AUDIT FRANK STAR 2007 FILE PHOTO Ahost of systemic shortcomings and failures have been uncovered by two lawsuits and an Indianapolis Star probe. was a little sur prised at the she er magnitude of the lack of accountability in very REP.

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Wayne Email us at Woo Hoo! Sign up. Sign on. Save more! Visit Kroger.com After months of furious debate, the $1.75 billion criminal justice center will go out not with a bang, but with a whimper. City-County Council Republicans on Monday opted not to call for a vote on the facility, instead allowing the clock to run out on a contractual deadline. As a result, Marion aging, crowded jail facilities are likely now a problem for future leaders to solve.

The proposed criminal justice center another like it will effectively shelved until after the Nov. 3 election. he Rules and Public Policy Committee condemned the proposal to purgatory last month, voting 6-2 along party lines not to send it to the full council. But Republicans mounted a last-ditch effort to salvage it. As late as Monday afternoon, some council members were still expecting employ a procedural move to pull it Criminal justice center likely dead Bipartisan coalition needed or passage billion project materialize Brian Eason brian.eason@indystar.com.

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About The Indianapolis Star Archive

Pages Available:
2,551,945
Years Available:
1862-2024