As the Vermont State Police alters their taser policy and Montpelier decides whether its police officers should carry the devices, we look at policies governing their use.
Vermont Attorney General Bill Sorrell addresses the recent ruling by Judge Murtha and other issues facing his office, we learn who Bruce Springsteen was singing about in his 1984 hit "Glory Days" and we return to Summer School to learn how to whittle.
The U.S. Supreme Court has
rejected a Vermont law that
requires doctors’ consent before their prescription records could be used by
drug companies to market prescription drugs to doctors.
We discuss Vermont’s Healthy Weight Initiative with Attorney General Bill Sorrell and Heath Commissioner Harry Chen. Plus, why Vermont has joined in a lawsuit against the NRC over the storage of spent nuclear fuel.
Vermont Attorney General Bill Sorrell and Secretary of State elect Jim Condos say the legislature should make changes to the state’s campaign finance laws.
Political action groups spent lavishly in this year’s statewide campaigns, raising questions about Vermont’s campaign finance laws. We talk about the laws and how they’re enforced.
Vermont
Attorney General Bill Sorrell says he’s not aware of any non-emergency
situations where cell phone records were requested by state authorities without
first getting court approval.
A recent dust up over cell phone tracking records highlights how new communications challenge open records laws. Also, working to save Vermont’s butternut trees.