

Thank you for signing and please continue to share. At the time of this update, we are 88 signatures away from the first major goal of 1000 signatures, and it is currently being broadcasted nationwide.
https://indianaconstitution.org/
According to the Indiana Bill of Rights, the Indiana General Assembly of our senators and House representatives has the Constitutional obligation to redress grievances through investigation and senate hearings for crime, negligence, or incapacity of our tax-funded public servants, pursuant to Article 6 Section 7 of the Indiana Bill of Rights linked above, and the specific article and section detailed below.
Unfortunately, when they are contacted for redress of grievances pursuant to Article 1 Section 31 of the Indiana Bill of Rights, they claim that they are only lawmakers and that is the extent to which they can redress grievances, typically leaving the response to unelected attorneys of our Indiana General Assembly. When they are presented with the plainly worded Indiana Bill of Rights, they refuse to respond because this would be evidence that they lack reading comprehension or that they refuse to adhere to our inherent, inalienable Rights documented in our Constitutions.
This petition gives specific instructions on how to easily contact each individual member of the Indiana General Assembly for redress of grievances. All Indiana senators and House representatives represent each inhabitant of Indiana, not only those in their specific district. They are all tax-funded by all constituents equally. Our representative government does not seem to comprehend that 2 wrongs do not make a right. This is the reason that we all have inherent freedom of information Rights documented in our Constitutions, to ensure that our representative government is fulfilling its contracts.
Article 1 Section 31 of the Indiana Bill of Rights states that "no law shall restrain any of the inhabitants of the State from assembling together in a peaceable manner, to consult for their common good; nor from instructing their representatives; nor from applying to the General Assembly for redress of grievances." This specifically states the General Assembly, which is the assembled group of senators and House representatives. Our representative government also attempts to change the definitions of words to avoid responsibility, transparency, and accountability. The Indiana Bill of Rights also does not mention our unelected tax-funded attorneys that our senators and house representatives delegate their Constitutional responsibilities to.
In September of 2025, I sent Access to Public Records Act requests to Sullivan County, Indiana officials regarding election financing. Having already exposed campaign financing fraud in our Indiana executive branch as detailed below, I decided to research our administrative branch as well. As is usual in Indiana, Article 1 Section 9 Freedom of Press Rights and Access to Public Records Act was violated.
I then contacted the Indiana Public Access "Counselor," with a formal complaint regarding the issue and I received confirmation that the complaint was received and was told it would be processed when "practical." As we all possess Freedom of Press Rights and laws apply to all equally, the "practical" process of this complaint should be in order of receipt. These records requests and complaints were also being sent to our Indiana senators and house representatives and our tax-funded attorneys of the Indiana General Assembly. While other state offices have an overabundance of tax-funded attorneys, there is only one interpreting the Access to Public Records Act, which is supposed to be plainly worded according to the Indiana Bill of Rights, to all tax-funded and private attorneys and custodians of records. This being the Indiana Public Access Counselor.
In reference to the current Access to Public Records Act requests involving campaign financing, they involve grant funding to Sullivan County, Indiana and were accessed from the Indiana Justice Reinvestment Advisory Council approved by the governor. Article 6 Section 5(a) of the Indiana Bill of Rights states that the Governor, and the Secretary, Auditor, and Treasurer of State, shall severally keep the public records, books, and papers, in any manner relating to their respective offices, at the seat of government. Records of expenditures of the Indiana Justice Reinvestment Advisory Council should be a matter of the State of Indiana. Therefore, the expenditures of this grant funding should have been on record via the Governor, the Secretary, Auditor, and/or Treasurer of State when requested, as well as Sullivan County, Indiana officials.
On September 25, 2025, I also sent Indiana Access to Public Records Act requests to the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency, the agency responsible for the licensing of occupational safety, health, and well-being. Freedom of Press/ Access to Public Records Act requests would have no other reason to be violated if not to obscure wrongdoing of some kind. This is the second time that the Indiana Access to Public Records Act has been violated by the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency. Our Indiana senators and house representatives are aware of this as I have attempted to apply for a redress of grievances for the situation previously and have received only misinformation regarding the capabilities of the Indiana General Assembly documented in our Indiana Bill of Rights. It apparently has not occurred to them that violations of the Professional Licensing Agency affect the services that they, their family, and friends receive as well.
For those who have signed the petition since the previous updates, on August 01, 2025, I got confirmation that the Indiana Attorney General's tax-funded campaign propaganda that the Indiana Legislature has seemingly approved is well underway, and he is also seemingly taking full credit for the Indiana State Fair now. The Indiana attorney general violated Indiana State statutes, namely Indiana IC 4-6-1-4 and IC 4-6-1-5(b) as well as the Indiana Access to Public Records Act. Most never knew this because instead of being held accountable for these actions, they were obscured by the Indiana Election Commission, Ethics Commission, Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission, and seemingly the General Assembly until they could hurriedly pass a bill to accommodate and obscure it as they do with the Indiana State Police Department and all Indiana representative government.
Article 1 Section 23 of the Indiana Bill of Rights states that "the General Assembly shall not grant to any citizen, or class of citizens, privileges or immunities, which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens."
Yet, how many can say that a Bill has been passed specifically to accommodate them and obscure their wrongdoing? According to the emails our State Representatives send out, the Indiana legislature violates the Indiana Bill of Rights regularly. Namely, Article 2 Section 9 and Article 3 Section 1, among others.
Article 2.
Section 9. No person holding a lucrative office or appointment under the United States or under this State is eligible to a seat in the General Assembly; and no person may hold more than one lucrative office at the same time, except as expressly permitted in this Constitution. Offices in the militia to which there is attached no annual salary shall not be deemed lucrative.
Article 3.
Section 1. The powers of the Government are divided into three separate departments; the Legislative, the Executive including the Administrative, and the Judicial: and no person, charged with official duties under one of these departments, shall exercise any of the functions of another, except as in this Constitution expressly provided.
The Indiana Attorney General is not mentioned in the Indiana Bill of Rights as it is a statutorily elected office of the Executive Branch, and only the Lieutenant Governor, as president of the senate, and occasionally the Governor are expressly provided in the Indiana Constitution.
Indiana Bill of Rights Article 4 Section 20 states that every act and joint resolution shall be plainly worded, avoiding, as far as practicable, the use of technical terms. Yet, one tax-funded attorney interprets the Access to Public Records Act to all Indiana custodians of records, private and tax-funded attorneys, and more than likely even the Legislative Branch which would further violate Article 2 Section 9 and Article 3 Section 1. Furthermore, our Freedom of Press and Article 1 Section 9 Rights are put on hold until this "advisory opinion" is given.
Our Indiana senators and house representatives are also boasting a new law which "increases the penalties for those who [obstruct], resist or [interfere] with a law enforcement officers duties, causing an increased risk of danger." This will be subject to interpretation and will undoubtedly translate into violating our First Amendment Right documented in the U.S. Constitution and Article 1 Section 9 of the Indiana Bill of Rights and IC 5-14-3-1 to record our representative government in the course of their duties. The Indiana State Police Department is constantly changing policies to avoid accountability for its wrongdoing.
Our Indiana senators and house representatives, as well as the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission, apparently fully support this as it seems to be a priority for them to obscure wrongdoing in the entire Indiana representative government. Examples of these obscured issues are as follows... the subject matter of our petition, the Indiana State Police Legal Counsel's mishandling of evidence while implicating a national company (a federal offense), Access to Public Records Act violations, campaign financing fraud, professional licensure fraud, requirement to waive U.S. and state Constitutional Rights in procurement of a representative government employment (https://www.hirenimble.com/terms employment discrimination, the extortion and exuberant charges of East Gibson School Corporation by a private attorney that ultimately only resulted in multiple Access to Public Records Act violations, mishandling of personal information, prosecutors violating our Rights in trial proceedings, and the alleged disaster relief fund fraud and illegal asset forfeiture in Sullivan County Indiana, to name a few that have been presented to Indiana General Assembly for redress with much supporting evidence. The Indiana General Assembly and the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission have been presented with much evidence with no results or acceptable response or outcome.
https://iga.in.gov/legislative/2025/bills/house/1001/details
https://www.des05.com/t/48043779/1774461131/103982937/0/60330/?x=0c9c5777
Article 6 Section 7 states that all State officers shall, for crime, incapacity, or negligence, be liable to be removed from office, either by impeachment by the House of Representatives, to be tried by the Senate, or by a joint resolution of the General Assembly; two-thirds of the members elected to each branch voting, in either case, therefor.
In contrast to this direct action, Article 6 Section 8 states that all State, county, township, and town officers, may be impeached, or removed from office, in such manner [as may be prescribed by law.]
Become familiar with the Indiana Bill of Rights and the Indiana Constitutional duties of our Indiana General Assembly and message them individually using the information located at the bottom of the original petition. There are links to our Indiana Bill of Rights and our Indiana statutes. Both are consistently violated by our Indiana representative government, including the Indiana General Assembly of Legislators. I possess much evidence of this, largely due to the boastful emails sent by our Indiana representative government. Many of our Legislators may not be aware of this as they are merely taking instructions from our tax-funded, unelected attorneys.