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Volume 12 Issue 158
Santa Monica Daily Press
NO MORE DRAMA SEE PAGE 12
We have you covered
THE BACK TO NORMAL ISSUE
Council may join fight against big business BY KEVIN HERRERA Editor-in-Chief
CITY HALL Elected officials appear ready to back a nationwide movement to amend the U.S. Constitution so that corporations would not be afforded the same rights as
people and therefore not be allowed to spend an unlimited amount of money on political campaigns. In April, the City Council ordered its attorneys to draft a resolution in support of the Move To Amend Campaign, which aims to establish that money is not a form of pro-
tected speech under the First Amendment and that inalienable rights belong to human beings only, not big businesses or unions. A resolution is ready for the council’s adoption, which could come Tuesday night. The campaign against “corporate personhood” gained momentum following the
controversial 2010 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission that rolled back limits on corporate campaign spending, essentially allowing businesses and unions to spend as much SEE COUNCIL PAGE 7
City Hall to extend BBB deal with SMC Editor’s note: This story is part of an ongoing series that tracks the city’s expenditures appearing on upcoming Santa Monica City Council consent agendas. Consent agenda items are routinely passed by the City Council with little or no discussion from elected officials or the public. However, many of the items have been part of public discussion in the past.
BY KEVIN HERRERA Editor-in-Chief
CITY HALL More Santa Monica College students are taking advantage of the Big Blue Bus’ “Any Line, Any Time” program created to cut traffic congestion, prompting the community college to increase the amount of money paid to City Hall to cover fares by 8 percent for a total of roughly $1.3 million per year. The City Council Tuesday is expected to approve the agreement at its regularly scheduled meeting. It is one of a handful of items featured on the council’s consent agenda, which includes a total of roughly $3.2 million in expenses. The “Any Line” program, which was created in the fall of 2008 after it was learned that most of SMC’s roughly 34,000 students and 1,700 employees commuted by car, has increased in popularity by 12 percent over the prior year for 1.78 million boardings as of February, according to a report by public transit officials. Over the last year, City Hall and SMC have held discussions to come up with a reimbursement formula that is considered SEE CONSENT PAGE 8
FUN IN THE SUN
Brandon Wise brandonw@smdp.com Visitors play and surf in the waves at Malibu Beach on Monday afternoon. Temperatures reached the low 80s on Monday along the coast.
Trial to start in aspiring model’s slaying BY DAILY PRESS STAFF LOS ANGELES Five years after an aspiring young model and actress was strangled and beaten in her Santa Monica home, the woman accused of killing her is going on trial.
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Jury selection began Monday in the trial of Kelly Soo Park. Park has plead not guilty to killing 21year-old Juliana Redding, who was slain in her apartment in 2008 while calling 911 for help. Grand jury transcripts say DNA match-
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ing Park was found on Redding’s skin, clothes and cellphone, and her fingerprints and DNA were found around the apartment. Park has been free on $3.5 million bail. SEE TRIAL PAGE 9