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BREAKING NEWS: Bally’s Remains Open After Car Drives Off Bally’s Parking Garage

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Updated November 25, 2024 at 7:30 PM
Operations are returning to normal at Bally’s after a strange incident this morning.
In the midst of the normal morning routine at Bally’s Casino, the sense of normal disappeared in one frightening moment when a car came crashing through the roof of the conference center. That car came from the top floor of the attached parking garage.
At the time of the crash, Koorsen Fire and Safety was hosting a conference for building inspectors and firefighters at the site. Koorsen is the fire protection company for Bally’s, and they aided in getting the building’s systems turned off. Firefighters and others attending the conference rendered aid at the scene.
The vehicle hit a concrete barrier, causing it to drop through the roof of the conference center, followed by the Ford SUV. The driver of the vehicle was the only injury.
A crane was brought in during the afternoon to lift the SUV and the concrete barrier out of the conference center.
The unanswered question is, “Why?” Police are putting together all of the information, looking at video footage, and planning to talk to the driver to determine what happened.

Bally’s was able to continue with normal casino operations through the day today and the parking garage will remain close until further notice.

Bally’s released the following statement: “We are currently investigating an incident involving a vehicle that drove off the seventh floor of our parking garage and will provide updates as necessary. Upon initial review, the incident appears to be the result of driver error. There are no signage or structural issues with the parking garage. The safety of our guests and staff remains our top priority.”

Scott strikes out 10 as Otters drop finale

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The Evansville Otters (24-45) fell in the final game of the series against the Lake Erie Crushers (40-27) on Thursday night, 4-0.

The Otters sent All-Star lefty Braden Scott to the mound for the start. He worked through three walks in the first inning but did not allow a run. In the second, he struck out two, followed by two more in the third.

He continued his great work into the sixth, to that point he had collected seven strikeouts. Lake Erie was able to collect a run to take the lead 1-0, but Scott struck out two more to bring his total to nine.

He finished the seventh inning with his 10th strikeout of the evening. This is the second game that Scott has reached 10 strikeouts this season. He now leads the Frontier League in strikeouts and has his third career 100 strikeout season.

He finished his line with seven innings, only allowing one run on four hits.

Lake Erie would score three more in the eighth and help on to a 4-0 win. This was the season series finale against Lake Erie, with the Crushers taking eight of the 12 matchups.

The Otters travel to Florence to take on the Florence Y’alls tomorrow at 6:03 p.m. CT.

Ashtyn Holbrook signs with UE Softball

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Freshman is from Georgetown, Ky.

 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – In her fourth signee of the week, University of Evansville head softball coach Bailey Dillender has announced the signing of Ashtyn Holbrook.  The third baseman/outfielder will be a freshman for the Purple Aces in 2026.

Ashtyn Holbrook – 3B/OF – Georgetown, Ky.

Holbrook comes to UE following a stellar career at Great Crossing High School.  After opening her career as the GCHS Rookie of the Year, she batted at least .370 in each of her four seasons. Her highest average came as a freshman where she batted .408.  As a junior, Holbrook finished with a .376 average while recording nine home runs. She is the all-time home run leader for her high school.

During her time at GCHS, Holbrook was a 3-time All-Region Team honoree, 3-time All-Tournament Regional Team selection, and earned two All-Tournament District Team honors.  She helped her team advance to the State Tournament in 2023.  Holbrook played for Lady Louisville Sluggers who were Tier 1 Alliance National Champions.  She had a walk-off hit for the team to send them to the championship game.

Coach Dillender on Holbrook: “Ash is just a gifted athlete. Her versatility and ability to play multiple positions at a high level, coupled with her experience the last couple of summers playing high level travel ball made it an easy decision for us to bring her with us! Look forward to seeing her growth and development with the Aces!”

Key updates to 2025 Community Block Development Grant programs

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Governor Braun Highlights Tax Relief for Farmers and Make Indiana Healthy Again Agenda at Indiana Ag Policy Summit

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Governor Mike Braun on Wednesday attended the Indiana Ag Policy Summit and participated in a fireside chat highlighting the tax relief for farmers in SEA 1 and wins for expanding opportunities for farmers in his Make Indiana Healthy Again agenda.

“Indiana farmers feed, clothe, and fuel America, and I’m glad to have the opportunity to share the wins we secured for Hoosier farmers this year: cutting property taxes and creating new opportunities to get fresh, local produce into Indiana schools and homes through our Make Indiana Healthy Again initiative.” – Governor Mike Braun

The Ag Policy Summit comes just days after the announcement that Indiana will soon be the location of a major USDA hub. The decentralization of the USDA is a key piece of President Donald Trump’s agricultural policy agenda.

“The selection of Indianapolis as one of five USDA hubs is a testament not only to Indiana being an agricultural powerhouse, but also to it being a great state to live, work and raise a family. The business of farming is strong in our state and the USDA made a great choice in putting its hub in Indiana, where it can be closer to the people it serves.” – Governor Mike Braun

The fireside chat was hosted by Courtney Kingery, CEO of Indiana Soybean Alliance and Indiana Corn Marketing Council.

At the fireside chat, Governor Braun highlighted the initiatives in his Make Indiana Healthy Again agenda focused on helping Hoosiers and schools access fresh, local produce from Indiana farmers. Make Indiana Healthy Again includes executive orders aiming to increase awareness, availability, and access to Indiana’s local fruits, vegetables, meats and dairy products.

Governor Braun also highlighted the wins for Hoosier farmers in SEA 1, the property tax bill that he recently signed into law, which includes $116 million in tax breaks for farmers.

This year’s legislative session saw several wins for farmers in the Freedom and Opportunity agenda, including changes to ensure the farmland base rate formula represents the true farm economy and that agriculture property values are determined both transparently and fair.

The Indiana Ag Policy Summit was attended by agriculture leaders, members of the Indiana Congressional delegation, and State Representatives and Senators from across Indiana.

Challenge coins: what are they and who has them?

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bt, Capital Chronicle

In just a few weeks, one Hoosier member of law enforcement will get a rare recognition: one of the Department of Child Services’ challenge coins honoring “a heroic act that protected a Hoosier child.”

“Our coins are awarded to individuals who demonstrate the characteristics featured on the coin — the courage of a lion, the thick skin of a rhino and the heart of a teddy bear,” a DCS spokesperson told the Indiana Capital Chronicle. “These coins are awarded on a limited basis, by our director only, and intended to honor someone’s service to DCS, a heroic act, perseverance and dedication to child welfare.”

Recipients include former foster children now “thriving” in adulthood, DCS team members retiring after decades working in child welfare and community heroes, such as the law enforcement officer set to receive one from DCS Director Adam Krupp.

The Department of Child Services challenge coin. (Courtesy of DCS) 

The 2025 445-coin order cost the department $1,495.20, according to an invoice shared by the agency. By ordering in bulk, the per-coin price dropped from $4.80 to $3.36 and included no upgraded edges or thickness — though both sides are the characteristic Indiana blue and gold.

Not all agencies or elected officeholders have the emblems. Gov. Mike Braun and Attorney General Todd Rokita don’t have one — but both Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith and Secretary of State Diego Morales do.

While the Indiana House of Representatives doesn’t have a coin, the Senate allows members to purchase the coins from their own funds, according to Sen. Travis Holdman, the Republican Majority Caucus Chair.

“We have probably ordered more than 1,000 challenge coins for our constituents to have,” Holdman, from Markle, estimated. “Some have really embraced it.”

The challenge coin for the Indiana Senate. (Courtesy of the Senate Republican Caucus) 

Holdman guessed that nearly everyone in the 40-member caucus had purchased one.

“I think it’s a sign of friendship and a sign of loyalty and dedication,” Holdman said, about his personal practice in distributing the tokens.

 

What are challenge coins?

 

Challenge coins are traditionally small medallions with a special design used to commemorate a special team or event. Oftentimes, these coins are used in the military and, according to the U.S. Department of Defense, have been used for a century in America “to instill unit pride, improve esprit de corps and reward hard work and excellence.”

The origin of the tradition is a little murkier, “probably,” the agency concludes, because it “didn’t start as an officially sanctioned activity.” A popular story posits that a wealthy lieutenant in World War I gave each of his unit members a bronze medallion as a memento but Roman soldiers also received special coins for their service.

The legend goes on to say that the WWI lieutenant was once trapped behind enemy lines and found refuge with French allies — who recognized him because of his challenge coin and granted him safe passage.

Holdman referenced this story in his own recounting of the coin’s importance, sharing that his son received a challenge coin upon graduating from officer school in the Air Force.

“That’s become a tradition,” said Holdman.

Secretary of Public Safety Jennifer-Ruth Green is looking into ordering her own coins, an office spokesperson confirmed. The combat veteran has a long military career with the Air Force and will grant coins to those who go “above and beyond” to keep Hoosiers safe.

The coin will also feature her motto as secretary: “people first, safety always.”

The proposed design for a challenge coin for Secretary of Public Safety Jennifer-Ruth Green. (Courtesy of DHS) 

Green oversees the Department of Homeland Security as part of her duties. The department shared details about two other recently purchased challenge coins: the Cobalt Magnet Challenge Coin and the CERT Challenge Coin.

The former recognizes those who participated in the Cobalt Magnet Radiological and Nuclear Multistate Exercise in March, which the U.S. Department of Energy said included more than 70 agencies across both the United States and Canada. One hundred coins were purchased at a cost of $470.80 in January, as detailed in an invoice shared by the agency.

The National CERT Conference for emergency managers, instructors and more will be held in Plainfield this fall and have its own coin. DHS purchased 500 of those for $2,350.08 in May — though grant funding covered the cost.

The Indiana State Police doesn’t have one as an agency but the office told the Indiana Capital Chronicle that several sections, with permission, have designed and ordered challenge coins for themselves and purchased them as a group. Additionally, the agency’s dedicated museum offers challenge coins for purchase.

In a military setting, challenge coins can even be a way to establish an alliance between countries, as shown by the collection of Brig. Gen. Lawrence Muennich, the adjutant general of Indiana’s National Guard.

“Military challenge coins are a significant way for senior leaders to recognize and commemorate exceptional service, accomplishments, or significant events in one’s military career. They are also a form of respect between allied forces, visiting dignitaries, and other senior leaders. When given, they signal mutual respect and enduring partnership,” a Guard spokesperson said.

An in-house graphic designer for ING designed Muennich’s coins, which feature a state cutout along with the signature of the state’s 60th adjutant general. The 500-coin purchase of $2,092 was paid for by funds from the State Armory Board — which has its own public administrative board and earns funds from renting out the state’s various armories.

Brig. Gen. Lawrence Muennich, the state’s adjutant general, has amassed several such coins over the decades.(Courtesy photo) 

But the practice has spread beyond its military roots. It’s unclear when individually elected offices and agencies not affiliated with the military or law enforcement picked it up in Indiana. An eBay seller specializing in challenge coins offers one from a former Indiana commerce secretary and another from a 2023 Indiana National Guard mission.

Holdman said he would “never” approve to purchase the coins as a state expense for senators and said he wasn’t previously aware that some state agencies had their own emblems.

“An agency like DCS needs to do absolutely everything they can to establish goodwill — so I would certainly give them a pass,” Holdman said after learning about the practice. “But if it’s a state elected official — I would never turn in a bill to have the Senate pay for anything like that.”

 

So who else has one?

 

The Office of Lieutenant Governor first told the Indiana Capital Chronicle it had no comment on its challenge coins — until it learned ICC had already confirmed their existence in an unrelated public records request.

According to the March emails, chief legal counsel Devin Norrick — an attorney with close legal ties to Beckwith’s church — sought legal guidance on whether the lieutenant governor’s challenge coin could feature a cross or bible verse.

A photo from the office shows that one side includes the Indiana state flag while the other features the state seal — a buffalo jumping over a log in a meadow. That side also includes the words “Faith, Family, Freedom” with Matthew 6:33, a short verse directing followers to “seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.”

Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith’s challenge coin. (Courtesy of the LG’s Office) 

“The Lt. Governor does have a challenge coin. He is proud to carry on this long-standing tradition by sharing them with his fellow Hoosiers,” the office said, declining to provide the coin’s cost.

The office also appears to have another coin design, according to constituents on social media, though it’s unclear where it came from or if it was purchased using state funds.

Secretary of State Diego Morales’ Office said he gives his coin to law enforcement officers, emergency responders, election administrators, members of the military, federal agency officials and more.

Morales distributes the coins himself and doesn’t provide them upon request, a spokesperson said.

“I am proud to carry on the long-standing tradition of presenting challenge coins — which are a modest but significant gesture rooted in military custom, to honor excellence, dedication, challenge, commitment, sacrifice, and accomplishment in public service,” said Morales. “As Indiana’s only current military veteran statewide officeholder I believe Hoosiers join me in valuing the history and meaning of presenting a state office challenge coin.”

Morales served with the Indiana National Guard.

The office didn’t provide an invoice, which might include design costs and other details such as size, but reported that it purchased 2,000 coins in 2024 at a cost of $3.60 each, or $7,200 total.

The Winchester News-Gazette reported in January 2024 that Morales gave a coin to a local county clerk and shared a more personal connection to the tradition. According to the publication, Morales said he received a challenge coin as a thank-you from Maj. Gen. R. Martin Umbarger.

“I said, if someday I have the opportunity to do that, I will do it,” Morales told the News-Gazette. “Now that I’m an elected official, I’m able to do my own challenge coin … This is my way for me to say, specifically for my team … thank you.”

Secretary of State Diego Morales’ challenge coin. (Courtesy of the Secretary of State’s Office) 

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Whitney Downard
WHITNEY DOWNARD

A native of upstate New York, Whitney previously covered statehouse politics for CNHI’s nine Indiana papers, focusing on long-term healthcare facilities and local government. Prior to her foray into Indiana politics, she worked as a general assignment reporter for The Meridian Star in Meridian, Mississippi. Whitney is a graduate of St. Bonaventure University (#GoBonnies!), a community theater enthusiast and cat mom.

Indiana Capital Chronicle is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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OVC Releases 2025-26 Conference Basketball Schedule

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s and Women’s Basketball has announced its Ohio Valley Conference schedule ahead of the 2025-26 season.

The OVC, which features an 11-team field, will have a 20-game schedule for the second straight season, allowing each conference team to play each other twice in a home-and-home series. The OVC has also had a 20-game league schedule from 2005-06 through 2007-08 and in 2020-21.

The 2025-26 Ohio Valley Conference features the same teams, consisting of the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, University of Tennessee at Martin, Morehead State University, Western Illinois University, Tennessee State University, Tennessee Tech University, Eastern Illinois University, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Southeast Missouri State University, Lindenwood University, and USI.

With the number of games, the schedule will begin before Christmas on December 18 and December 20. USI will tip off league play at home against the University of Arkansas at Little Rock on December 18 and against Morehead State University on December 20 from Liberty Arena, home of the Screaming Eagles. The OVC regular season concludes on February 28.

The rest of the OVC action at Liberty Arena features Southeast Missouri State (January 8) and UT Martin (January 10); a four-game homestand against Eastern Illinois (January 22), Western Illinois (January 24), Lindenwood (January 29), and SIUE (January 31); and the final home weekend against Tennessee State (February 12) and Tennessee Tech (January 14).

Following the Screaming Eagles’ OVC home-opening slate before Christmas, USI will ring in the new year on the road at SIUE (January 1) and Lindenwood (January 3).

After starting the new year at SIUE and Lindenwood, the remaining road schedule includes a Tennessee swing to Tennessee Tech (January 15) and Tennessee State (January 17), stops at UT Martin (February 5) and Southeast Missouri (February 7), and concluding the regular season with four consecutive road contests at Western Illinois (February 19), Eastern Illinois (February 21), Morehead State (February 24), and Little Rock (February 28).

The 2026 OVC Men’s and Women’s Basketball Tournament is slated for March 4-7 at the Ford Center in Evansville, Indiana. It marks the ninth consecutive year that the event will be held at the venue.

The USI Men’s Basketball squad finished the 2024-25 season 10-20 overall, along with a 5-15 mark in conference play.

The USI Women’s Basketball squad enjoyed another strong campaign in 2024-25 that saw the Screaming Eagles go 23-13 overall and 12-8 in the OVC, reaching the semifinals of the OVC Championship Tournament, and earning a second consecutive berth in the Women’s National Invitation Tournament (WNIT). USI reached its first-ever Super 16 in the WNIT.

The 2025-26 season marks the first year in which USI is a full-fledged NCAA Division I member and eligible to compete in NCAA postseason championship competition.

All OVC games and home non-conference contests can be seen on ESPN networks, with the majority of games broadcast on ESPN+. Additional linear exposures on ESPNU and ESPN2 will be announced at a later date.

The USI Men’s and Women’s basketball non-conference games will be announced once the schedules are complete.

 Join Us for the First-Ever Patriot Gala – A Night to Honor Heroes & Uplift Our Community!

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ECHO Housing & Community Development Announces
Inaugural Patriot Gala
Presented by Business Communications Solutions (BCS)

📅 Saturday, November 1, 2025
📍 CK Newsome Center | Evansville, IN
🎟️ Reserve Your Spot or Sponsor Here »

Good Afternoon,

We’re thrilled to invite you to a glamorous night of gratitude and giving at ECHO Housing’s first annual Patriot Gala—a Casablanca-themed evening celebrating our community’s Veterans and First Responders while raising critical support for individuals overcoming homelessness.

Dust off your vintage glam and join us for a heartfelt and unforgettable experience!

✨ What to Expect:

🎲 Casino Games – Test your luck at classic tables! Winnings = raffle power for amazing prizes.

🍽️ Dinner & Cash Bar – Enjoy an elegant, era-inspired meal catered by Venue 812.

🏆 Awards Ceremony – With special guest Mayor Stephanie Terry, we’ll honor our local heroes for their courage, sacrifice, and service.

💃 Dancing – Swing and sway the night away to the timeless sounds of the 1940s!

🎟️ Raffle – The more you win at the tables, the more chances you have to take home one-of-a-kind prizes!


🤝 How You Can Get Involved:

  • Sponsor the event to show your business’s support for local heroes and our community.

  • Donate a raffle item or experience to help make the night unforgettable.

  • Buy a Table or Tickets and join the celebration.

  • Nominate a Hero – Submit a Veteran or First Responder to be recognized at the Awards Ceremony.

👉 Learn more and get involved at: https://echohousing.org/patriot-gala

Let’s come together to honor the past, celebrate the present, and build a stronger, more compassionate future for all.

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.