Skip to main content

‘0INK’ vanity plate fight could go to Legislature

CHARLES D. WILSON
Associated Press

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A battle over vanity plates that started in a county courtroom could wind up in the Indiana Statehouse.

The Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles says it will Monday ask the state Supreme Court to overrule a local judge who found parts of the BMV’s vanity plate program — and the law that allows it — unconstitutional.

The issue first arose when the BMV revoked a police officer’s plate reading “0INK.”

BMV Commissioner Donald M. Snemis tells The Associated Press that if the court strikes down the vanity plate statute, the debate would wind up in the Legislature. At that point, lawmakers might have to decide if the whole program is worth the trouble.

American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana Legal Director Ken Falk says vanity plates are “extremely popular” nationwide.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Hail to the chief: Take our presidential trivia quiz

EDITOR'S NOTE: WTOP first brought you this quiz in 2019. Presidents Day is coming. How well do you know the less-important facts about the nation's leaders? Take WTOP's quiz — with any luck, it won't take you all Presidents Day to finish it.
Read Next Story