• A second federal line of inquiry confirmed in the Lucas Lodge case

    by James C. Sherlock

    A professional portrait of a smiling older woman with silver hair, wearing a black outfit and a statement necklace.
    Senator Louise Lucas

    As noted in this author’s article โ€œClown Showโ€ this morning, Louise Lucasโ€™ daughter, in an interview with the Virginian-Pilot published yesterday, revealed for the first time that the FBI seized Lucas Lodge resident medical records in its recent simultaneous raids on that facility and Louise Lucas’ The Cannabis Outlet. Though no indictments have been unsealed as a result of those raids, the disclosure confirms two separate lines of federal inquiry.

    • The first has been known since the day of the raid.ย It is indicated by seizure of potential evidence at Louise Lucasโ€™ The Cannabis Outlet, adjacent to Lucas Lodge.
    • Now, Lisa Lucas-Burke has confirmed a second. The seizing of medical records may indicate additional federal legal problems for Lucas Lodge, its Medicaid-funded programs for persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities, and its CEO, Louise Lucas.

    Virginia

    While any federal charges can be joined by Virginia, there is at least one potential issue unique to the Commonwealth. A business entity search of the State Corporation Commission Clerkโ€™s Information System for The Cannabis Outlet shows

    Entity ID S3071612, The Cannabis Outlet Fictitious Name, Limited Liability Company, Address 1214 COUNTY ST, PORTSMOUTH, VA, 23704, Agent: VERBENA M ASKEW, Status: Inactive

    A further search shows that Lucas Hospitality, LLC is entity ID S3071612. Open Corporates parrots and summarizes the SCC data:

    Lucas Hospitality, LLC. Company Number: S3071612

    Status: Inactive

    Incorporation Date: 23 October 2009 (over 16 years ago)

    Dissolution Date: 31 January 2024

    Company type: Limited Liability Company

    Jurisdiction: Virginia (US)

    Registered Address; 1214 COUNTY ST, PORTSMOUTH, 23704-0000VirginiaUnited States

    Alternative Names: The Cannabis Outlet (trading name, 2023-03-21 – )

    Business Classification Text: GENERAL

    Inactive Directors / Officers: VERBENA M ASKEW, agent

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  • Clown Show

    Clown Show

    by James C. Sherlock

    Statutory powers and responsibilities do not bestow competence.

    The General Assembly created the Office of the State Inspector General (OSIG) within the Office of the Governor in 2011. The powers and duties of that office are defined in Code of Virginiaย ยง 2.2-309. The role focuses on detecting fraud, waste, and abuse in the executive branch. Additional duties are assigned, one of which will be the primary focus of this article.

    State agencies, officers, and employees are directed to cooperate with OSIG investigations, and the Governor is prohibited from interfering with any such investigation. OSIG is grantedย police andย subpoena powers.

    Wow, huh?

    Pretty scary. It is meant to be.

    This reporter has found that the issues some might consider government โ€œfraud, waste, or abuseโ€ most often involve misfeasance – carelessness or negligence in the performance of a lawful act. He figures that OSIG must have the same experience. Misfeasance is a mistake, not a crime.

    But State Inspectors General are necessary. The issue in Virginia is that the OSIG’s responsibilities are both overly broad and have not been executed well.

    2019 JLARC assessment

    The Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (JLARC) has not been kind in its reviews of OSIG. The criticism has been strikingly direct.

    In 2019, JLARC found OSIG had failed in three key missions:

    • OSIG is not adequately fulfilling its intended role as a centralized investigative agency
    • OSIG has struggled to build a fully effective performance audit function, and
    • OSIG has not adequately fulfilled its statutory responsibility to oversee behavioral health and developmental services facilities and providers

    A personal note. If the author, twice in command during his naval career, had received such a review, he would have been summarily relieved. He would have deserved it.

    Things have not gotten noticably better since.

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  • Assembly and Spanberger Made Zero Progress on Virginia Energy Challenges

    by Steve Haner

    What the General Assembly ordered us to buy instead of true power generation.

    In advance of the 2025 election, the Jefferson Forum outlined in this June commentaryย the energy challenges facingย Virginia. New Governor Abigail Spanberger (D) and the General Assembly have now concluded work on the 2026 energy legislation and Virginia has made zero progress โ€“ and may be losing ground.ย 

    Ignore the political posturing coming from Capitol Hill in Richmond.ย The reliability riskย remains, and electricity costs are going toย keepย rising.ย 

    It would be nice to report that Jefferson Forumโ€™s efforts, including more time at the Assembly this winter, made a difference.ย But being closer to the process this year only underlined that theย elected officials are working without much understanding of theย issues, that most bills are not accompanied by financial analysis or ratepayer impact information,ย and the various donor groups,ย suchย the utilities and those seeking toย dictateย utility policy, are heard more often thanย averageย consumers.ย ย 

    Theย key issueย a year agoย wasย the growing disconnectionย between Virginiaโ€™s electricityย demand and its internal supply.ย Projected demand from the exploding data center industry even callsย into question whether the multistate PJM Interconnectionย Virginiaย belongs toย willย have enough supply for Virginia in coming years, and it certainlyย wonโ€™tย withoutย controversial new transmission lines.ย ย 

    The General Assembly session passed nothing that will close the looming supply shortage.ย Another bitter winter blast like the one early this year, or a summer heat spell requiringย an equalย energy surge, could bring the dreaded involuntary demands to reduce or cut off the power.ย ย ย 

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  • Bacon Meme of the Week

    A humorous image featuring crispy bacon on a plate with text overlay about only eating bacon on days that start with 'T', referring to Tuesday, Thursday, Thaturday, and Thunday. The image also includes a container of 'Denny's Bacon Salt'.

  • Spanberger Right to Veto Public Employee Unionization Bill

    by Derrick A. Max

    Governor Abigail Spanberger

    Virginia Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, the sponsor of a sweeping public-sector collective bargaining bill (Senate Bill 378) said Governor Spanberger told him Wednesday that she planned to veto the legislation.โ€ฏ If she does, she will be making the right decision for Virginia taxpayers, local governments, students, public employees and for her status as the leader of her party here in the Commonwealth. 

    According to her amendment justification, Governor Spanberger supports collective bargaining generally, but not the way this bill would implement it.  That distinction matters! 

    The original bill was not a modest reform. It would repeal Virginiaโ€™s existing limits on public-sector collective bargaining, create a new Public Employee Relations Board, require public employers to negotiate over wages, hours, and other terms of employment, and establish collective bargaining for individual home care providers through a new state structure. It also would repeal Virginiaโ€™s statutory protection declaring secret-ballot votes in union representation proceedings a fundamental right. 

    The Jefferson Forum warned repeatedly that this legislation would move Virginia in the wrong direction. It would weaken local control, increase costs, empower union bosses, inject more politics into public institutions, and impose rigid labor rules at the very moment Virginia needs flexibility and affordability. 

    Governor Spanbergerโ€™s proposed amendments recognized many of our concerns. She sought to delay implementation for local governments until 2030, alter the new labor board structure, and preserve more authority for public employers. The General Assembly rejected those changes and sent the bill back to her in its original form.  A clear disregard for the Governorโ€™s concerns and authority.   

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  • The Integrity of Healthcare Programs in Virginia โ€“ Part 2 Forests and Trees

    by James C. Sherlock

    A smiling woman with gray hair styled in soft waves, wearing a black top and a silver chain necklace, against a blurred gray background.

    Federally-funded programs administered by the states are primary targets of fraud and abuse because of the vast sums at stake.  The amount of money at risk is literally unimaginable. Medicare and Medicaid alone exceed two trillion dollars a year. 

    Federal programs are widely victimized in Virginia because the Commonwealth does not defend them well.  The Commonwealth recovers millions of dollars. Billions escape.

    State defenders against fraud in many federally funded programs run by the Commonwealth have a too-narrow focus. Actively hampered by the General Assembly, they are ignoring the forest as they examine the trees.

    States operate their own programs under federal and state guidelines for:

    • administering Medicaid,
    • licensing and overseeing providers of healthcare and of assistance to people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD);
    • managing unemployment insurance systems. Those are funded through a joint federal-state partnership financed by employer payroll taxes โ€” state unemployment taxes (SUTA) for benefits and federal unemployment taxes (FUTA) for administration. ย 
    • conducting public assistance programs for the needy that are largely funded by the federal government. ย Major programs like SNAP (food assistance) and TANF (cash assistance) are funded by the federal government but managed at the state level.

    In Virginia and other states, there are four lines of defense against program fraud, waste, and abuse:

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  • The Single Funniest Thing on the Web May Mask Tragedy

    by James C. Sherlock

    The story behind the jokes is true, well-documented, and strange. From X:

    Comedy is funniest when it is based on an underlying truth. Freitas offersย a hilarious satire.ย 

    Attorney General Jay Jones is lit up by Mr. Freitas for actual typos. Virginia (Virgnia) and Senator (Sentator) were misspelled in a court filing seeking a delay in the certification of the Virginia Supreme Court’s decision finding the recent redistricting process illegal under the Virginia Constitution. He also lampoons Jones for the misspelling of Attorney (Attoney) on his official website and Lucas for misspelling Senator (again, unaccountably, Sentator) in her press release about her recent arrest.

    The satire is funny because it is so well done and true. A fascination for the audience that makes it funnier is that the errors are so inexplicable in the modern era.  This author has been forced to override his spell checker to let him even quote each of the misspellings.  

    What is not funny is Jay Jones’ ongoing struggles. Before his election, he made a terrible error in an infamous early morning text that revealed extremely dark thoughts – he expressed a wish for the death of a political opponentโ€™s children.  

    Now this. Were the embarrassing errors that were the subject of the Freitas lampoon committed again in the early morning?  

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  • How Bad Is Surovell at His Job?

    Close-up of a man with a beard, wearing a brown suit jacket and a blue shirt, speaking or engaged in conversation.
    State Senator Scott Surovell

    by Joe Fitzgerald

    The first was a plan to put a casino in Fairfax County, despite the objections of the local government there. He knew better than the county supervisors. The governor vetoed it.

    Scott Surovell has had three major failures in his third year as leader of the state Senate Democrats.

    The second was his push to appoint an anti-immigrant general district court judge in an area thatโ€™s heavily immigrant. The appointment was successful, but the decision to do so was a failure prima facie. But Surovell knew better than local Democrats.

    The third was his push for a redistricting referendum on shaky legal grounds. Many serious people who favored redistricting still expected the referendum to fail on constitutional grounds. Surovell knew better than the skeptics, but today the Virginia Supreme Court agreed with the skeptics.

    The greatest damage from the referendum push is to the governor, who lost ten points in her approval rating, in part from supporting the referendum, which stank even for many of us voting for it. The more general damage is to the Democratic Party in general, flip-flopping on redistricting and doing it badly.

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  • Virginiaโ€™s Decision on Federal School Choice Tax Credit Program Looms

    Two Democratic Governors Join Federal School Choice Tax Credit Program While Virginia’s State Program Faces Sunset

    by Todd Truitt

    Two Democratic governors have now chosen to participate in a new federal school choice tax-credit scholarship program. New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced this week that her state will opt in, following Colorado Governor Jared Polis. In addition, North Carolina Governor Josh Stein said he plans to opt-in once the federal government issues regulations on the program later this year. While only two Democratic governors have said they will not participate, most of the rest are undecided.

    Former Governor Glenn Youngkin opted the Commonwealth into the program in January 2026 before leaving office. As the programโ€™s 2027 launch date approaches, many are watching Governor Abigail Spanberger to see whether she will maintain participation.

    The federal program, part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act passed last year, allows individual taxpayers to claim a dollar-for-dollar nonrefundable federal tax credit of up to $1,700 for donations to qualified nonprofit scholarship-granting organizations (SGOs). These organizations can then provide scholarships for private school tuition, tutoring, educational materials, or other approved K-12 expenses. Participation requires no state funding, but states must actively opt in for residents to access the benefits.

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  • Bacon Meme of the Week

    A chef in a kitchen with various cooking equipment, humorously questioning why bacon is called bacon and cookies are called cookies, with a backdrop of cooking food and baked cookies.

  • Contrary to Popular Belief, Data Centers Slow the Increase in Energy Prices

    by Derrick Max

    For several years, opponents of data center growth in Virginia have advanced a simple political narrative: data centers consume enormous amounts of electricity, therefore they โ€œmustโ€ be driving up electric bills for ordinary Virginians.

    It is an emotionally intuitive and persuasive argument. It is also increasingly unsupported by the evidence.

    A new analysis from theย Institute for Energy Researchย directly examined electricity prices, electricity demand growth, and data center concentration across all 50 states. The findings should fundamentally reshape the debate in Virginia, home to the worldโ€™s largest concentration of data centers.

    The report foundย no statistically significant correlationย between the number of data centers in a state and either current electricity prices or faster price increases over time. In fact, the ten states with the most data centers, including Virginia, Texas, California, Illinois, and Ohio all had electricity prices almost identical to the national average.

    Map of the United States showing electricity rate increases and the distribution of data centers. Blue areas indicate electricity costs above the national average, while red areas indicate below average costs. The size of the circles represents the number of data centers in each region.

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  • The Bravest Democrat in the 2026 General Assembly took on Louise Lucas

    by James C. Sherlock

    A smiling man with a bald head, wearing a blue blazer and a patterned shirt, standing outdoors with streetlights in the background.
    Del. Garrett McGuire (D-Fairfax County)

    You know how sometimes you try to do the right thing for the right reason, and it blows up in your face?  

    One of the newest members of the General Assembly is freshman Delegate Garrett McGuire, D-Fairfax. He is either the bravest of the Democrats or one who committed a rookie mistake. 

    His HB 1423, as introduced, stated in part:

    ยง 1. That the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (the Department) shall analyze the existing authority for oversight and accountability of group homes and make recommendations for increasing the oversight and accountability of group homes. (emphasis added)

    So, knowingly or not, Del. McGuire asked for an assessment of increased oversight, accountability, and investigation into the Medicaid-funded business of Senate Finance and Appropriations Chair Louise Lucas.

    Right thing to do. Prescient even. But Del. Garrett is unlikely to be well received in Democratic circles, who may be asked whether they, too, are interested in improving client safety at Lucas Lodge. Or if the Justice Department investigation is still driven solely by Republicans mad about redistricting. Or something.

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  • SCOTUS Ends Racial Segregation of Voting Districts

    Virginia Beach’s race-based voting districts are now in the crosshairs.

    Close-up of a map showing Virginia Beach and Newport News in Virginia, marked with a red pushpin.

    by Victoria Manning

    Democrats across the nation created voting maps shoving black voters into racially apportioned districts. Forced segregation was wrong at the water fountain and it’s equally wrong at the ballot box. The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) just ruled race-based voting districts unconstitutionalโ€”impacting state and local voting maps across the nation including Virginia Beach, VA.

    The Louisiana v. Callais case began when a judge ordered the state of Louisiana to redraw its voting maps to specifically include a majority-minority district based on race. A group of voters then challenged that new district in court as an unconstitutional racial gerrymander in violation of the Equal Protection Clause. It ultimately ended up on the high court’s docket.

    SCOTUS ruled inย Callaisย that creating voting districts based on race is an “unconstitutional racial gerrymander.” The court held that the Voting Rights Act that guarantees a person’s right to vote not be denied because of race still holds, but the drawing of districts must focus on the “enforcement of the Fifteenth Amendment’s prohibition on intentionalย racial discrimination.” They also determined that states can still draw districts based on nonracial factors, including “to achieve partisan advantage.”

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  • Virginia Supremes Speak

    A judge in a courtroom striking a map of Virginia with a gavel, highlighting the division between different regions marked in red and blue.
    Ai-generated image by Grok

    The Virginia Supreme Court has struck down the redistricting amendment on the grounds that lawmakers violated the state constitutional procedure for placing amendments on the ballot. I’m leaving for vacation today, but I’ll post reactions on the blog — in the order they arrive in my inbox (newest on top) — until I have to head to the airport. — JAB


    Statement of House GOP Leader Terry Kilgore Statement on Supreme Court Ruling

    GATE CITY, Va–House GOP Leader Terry Kilgore issued the following statement regarding today’s ruling from the Supreme Court of Virginia:

    “Todayโ€™s ruling establishes once again that the Constitution of Virginia means what it says. The rule of law requires that Virginians have an opportunity to review a Constitutional Amendment before they vote for the House of Delegates in a meaningful way. You cannot violate the Constitution to amend the Constitution.”ย 


    Attorney General Jason Miyares issued the following statement through Fair Maps following this morning’s Virginia Supreme Court ruling:

    โ€œVirginians spoke loud and clear in 2020 that voters should pick their elected officials, not the other way around. Today, their voices were heard over the shamefully deceptive rhetoric and language of an unconstitutional effort by Richmond Democrats to carve up the state for themselves. We thank the Justices for their swift action to uphold the rights of our fellow Virginians all across the Commonwealth.โ€

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  • The Day Grant Saved America

    As Virginia celebrates the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, there’s another anniversary we should honor as well: the Wilderness Campaign.

    by Shaun Kenney

    A wooded area with lush green trees surrounding a road intersection featuring a stop sign and a yield sign.

    โ€œThey came to a crossroads in the track out of the eastern reaches of The Wilderness. If they turned left it would mean they were heading north. If they turned right โ€” south. And from their throats burst a tremendous shout of exultation. It was in the darkness and dust that they had what they later remembered as a rebirth of themselves as men and as an army. Through their ranks came Ulysses S. Grant, and they shouted for him and waved their hats in the air for him.โ€

    โ€” Gene Smith, โ€œLee and Grantโ€ (p. 201)


    While I have no idea why Virginia 250 is sputtering, I am absolutely shocked to see that Virginia isnโ€™t doing anything cohesive to celebrate and promote the founding of America.

    Not to put too fine a point on it, but America is a Virginian idea, created by Virginians, bled for by Virginians, where Virginia conceded her western claims which entitled her to be a nation unto herself, where Virginians โ€” Jefferson among them, but George Mason and George Wythe as well โ€” articulated the reasons for the separation with Great Britain, where the American War for Independence resolved itself at Yorktown, where Virginians led by James Madison forged the U.S. Constitution, and where the Virginia Dynasty from Washington through Monroe led the early republic for 32 of its first 36 years.

    What is little disputed is that the two bonds that kept the United States together were the words Liberty and Union โ€” โ€œLiberty and Union, Now and Forever, One and Inseparable!โ€ was Senator Daniel Websterโ€™s reply to South Carolinaโ€™s John Calhoun when the prospect of nullification, an idea floated by Jefferson and Madison in the Virginia and Kentucky Resolves, hovered around the debate between statesโ€™ rights and the scope of the federal government. President Andrew Jackson threatened to call up the troops and South Carolina submitted to the Union, for a time.

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