Indiana secretary of state’s office receives suspicious ‘powdery substance’

Indiana Secretary of State employees on Tuesday reported getting a “suspicious” envelope containing a “powdery substance” — joining election officials in numerous states.

Local, state and federal authorities responded to the State Government Center to secure the immediate area, conduct tests and remove the contaminated mail, according to a news release.

Responding agencies included the Indiana Capital Police, Indiana State Police, State Fire Marshall, Indiana Department of Homeland Security, State and Post Office hazardous materials units, and the Federal Bureau of Investigations.

They determined — preliminarily — that the contents in the envelope were non-hazardous, per the release.

“We take every precaution to ensure the safety of our employees and the public. I want to especially thank members of my team; our law enforcement partners and other first responders for their swift and professional response,” Secretary of State Diego Morales said. “We are relieved that everyone is safe.”

Powdery packages were also delivered this week to election-related offices in at least a dozen states, The Associated Press reported: Connecticut, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New York, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Wyoming.

Morales’ office said he had made county clerks aware of the situation.

Spokeswoman Lindsey Eaton also noted that, earlier this year, Morales hand-delivered and mailed instructions on spotting and handling suspicious email — plus, doses of Narcan nasal spray — to county clerks’ offices throughout the state.

She also highlighted recent regional election security and safety conferences for county election administrators, emergency management offices and local law enforcement agencies.

Indiana Capital Chronicle is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Indiana Capital Chronicle maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Niki Kelly for questions: info@indianacapitalchronicle.com. Follow Indiana Capital Chronicle on Facebook and X.

Indiana elections chief directs 100+ federal agencies to halt 'unauthorized involvement'

Indiana Secretary of State Diego Morales’ office warned more than 120 federal agencies operating in Indiana against providing voter registration services described in a three-year-old presidential executive order without state approval.

“This letter from my office is in response to the broad executive order from President (Joe) Biden directing federal agencies to engage in election activity,” Morales said Tuesday on his personal X account.

“States know best when it comes to our elections,” he continued. “We don’t need federal government overreach to run safe, secure elections!”

Morales’ office didn’t immediately provide specific examples of law-breaking.

A pandemic-era order, and a letter

Biden’s spring 2021 order, titled “Promoting access to voting,” mandates federal agencies to “consider ways” to encourage citizen participation in the electoral process.

He ordered agency heads to evaluate options — “consistent with applicable law” — like public information campaigns, agency website links to state and federal voter registration resources, and “direct engagement.” That could include distributing voter registration and mail-in ballot application forms, helping citizens complete the forms, or having nonpartisan third parties provide those services.

In his June 28 letter, Morales wrote, “It has been brought to my attention that President Biden’s federal executive order …. effectively orders all federal executive departments and agencies to ‘expand access to voter registration.'”

It was sent to more than 120 federal entities, a spokeswoman said.

Morales noted that, under longstanding law, a state must ask an agency to be a designated “voter registration agency” in order for the agency to conduct voter registration activities.

And, he continued, “To my knowledge, your agency is not a designated voter registration agency.” He asked agency recipients to report any directives they received and actions they’ve taken to implement the order within 10 days of receipt.

“If your agency has been distributing voter registration forms or assisting the public with voter registration or absentee voting forms, you are requested to discontinue such action immediately, as the unauthorized conduct of such activity is likely violative of Indiana and federal law,” Morales wrote.

Biden’s order, however, required agencies to agree to the state’s request, “to the greatest extent practicable and consistent with applicable law.” If the agency were to decline, they’d have to submit a written explanation of the decision.

The order also required heads of agencies that directly engage with the public to “formally notify” states in which they operate that they would agree to being a designated voter registration agency.

Part of a trend

Morale’s letter is the latest rejection of Biden’s order.

Conservative activists and politicians across the country, including political action committees and a Republican-led House committee, have targeted the order in recent months, Politico has reported.

Morales in May joined eight fellow Republican secretaries of state in asking the U.S. Supreme Court to take on a case challenging the order. The court said it wouldn’t do so by the end of June, and won’t consider taking it up until the fall.

But Morales isn’t the first from Indiana to push back against the order.

Former Secretary of State Holli Sullivan — who Morales beat out for the position — was among 15 GOP secretaries of state to sign onto a 2022 letter to Biden asking him to rescind the order.

CONTACT USMorales, meanwhile, concluded his letter by listing his office’s voter registration efforts.

“Notwithstanding my enthusiasm for registering eligible voters, the state of Indiana has a statutory framework for voter registration and assistance activity that must be respected,” he wrote.

Several conservative interest groups praised Morales’ move.

“By signing (the order), President Biden is abusing the power of the federal government in a desperate attempt to boost his sinking campaign. Thankfully, Hoosiers are having none of it,” Catherine Gunsalus, Heritage Action’s director of state advocacy, said in a news release Tuesday. The group is a sister to conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation.

“Secretary Morales should be applauded for protecting Indiana from undue federal overreach and directing agencies in his state to refuse to go along with Biden’s scheme,” she added. “As November quickly approaches, Heritage Action urges states across the country to follow Indiana’s lead and safeguard their elections from federal overreach.”

Heritage Action’s watchdog arm, The Oversight Project, sent a memo dated May 15 to state officials describing Biden’s order as “federally funded and partisan get-out-the vote election interference.” It suggested ways states could “fight back.”

“We are thrilled that Secretary of State Morales is taking up our recommendation to kick the Feds out of Indiana’s elections,” Mike Howell, The Oversight Project’s executive director, said in the news release. “The people of Indiana should decide their own elections. Biden’s illegal taxpayer funded scheme to have government agencies run the get-out-the-vote operation for his campaign is an egregious abuse of power.”

Indiana Capital Chronicle is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Indiana Capital Chronicle maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Niki Kelly for questions: info@indianacapitalchronicle.com. Follow Indiana Capital Chronicle on Facebook and X.

THC found in controversial Indiana GOP Rep's blood after car crash: toxicology report

Rep. Jim Lucas had THC — the active ingredient in marijuana — in his blood the day he was arrested for hitting a guardrail and driving the wrong way on an interstate entrance ramp, according to a state toxicology report.

The Tribune in Seymour first reported the report’s release. But the results won’t change the repercussions Lucas faces, according to the prosecutor who handled his case.

The Seymour representative is known for his Second Amendment and marijuana support, as well as repeated controversial social media posts.

Crash and consequences

Lucas failed multiple field sobriety tests early May 31, when Seymour police found him nearly three miles south of the crash site, according to an Indiana State Police crash report obtained by the Capital Chronicle last month. And a portable breathalyzer test showed his blood alcohol concentration (BAC) at .097 — higher than the .08 legal limit in Indiana.

Rep. Jim Lucas drove on rims for miles after alleged drunk driving crash, per Indiana police report

Lucas pleaded guilty last month to two charges: leaving the scene of an accident, a Class B misdemeanor, and operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated, a Class C misdemeanor. He was handed a 180-day suspended sentence for leaving the scene and a 60-day suspended sentence on the OWI charge.

As part of his plea agreement, Lucas will spend one year on probation, but also must complete an alcohol and drug program, pay court and probation fees and pay nearly $4,000 for crash repairs and restitution to the Indiana Department of Transportation.

He also must attend a victim impact panel, and faces substance abuse screenings and some driving restrictions.

Marijuana complications

Prosecutors brought those charges, and a judge sentenced Lucas, prior to the release of the Indiana State Police toxicology test results.

His blood sample had about 14 nanograms of THC per milliliter of blood, according to the report, filed June 27. States with THC limits typically consider 5 nanograms as impaired; Indiana’s statute doesn’t specify a limit because the substance is generally always illegal.

Adding a charge for that wouldn’t have changed the results, Jackson County Prosecutor Jeff Chalfant told the Capital Chronicle in an email Friday.

That’s because the Indiana statute criminalizing operating a vehicle with certain blood alcohol levels is the same one criminalizing driving with a schedule I or II controlled substance in the blood, according to Chalfant. THC is a schedule I substance.

“I probably would have charged both counts in this instance if I had the results of the blood analysis,” Chalfant wrote.

But, he added, “Charging a person both ways … does not make any difference in the end, because a person can only be convicted of one of the these offenses by law.”

This is commonly called double jeopardy.

What’s next

Lucas has repeatedly said he won’t step down, despite the crash and its aftermath. Legislative leaders haven’t yet said if he’ll face consequences.

“I haven’t had really a chance to talk to him,” House Speaker Todd Huston said last month. “I’ll take a look at it and see what we do moving forward.”

A spokesperson for Huston didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the THC-positive toxicology results.

Lucas didn’t immediately return a message Friday.

But just this week, he posted a mea culpa on his Facebook page, saying “I recently made mistakes and exercised horrible judgement … My recent mistakes and horrible judgement. My ownership of them. I own it 100%. My acceptance of the court’s judgement. I’m getting professional help.”

Lucas went on to say he is grateful innocent people weren’t hurt and saying he humiliated himself, his loved ones and friends.

“I’ve learned and will continue to learn everyday for the rest of my life from these mistakes and errors in judgement. I am and will be a much better person because of this.”

Indiana Capital Chronicle is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Indiana Capital Chronicle maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Niki Kelly for questions: info@indianacapitalchronicle.com. Follow Indiana Capital Chronicle on Facebook and Twitter.