INDIANAPOLIS — Lilly King and Josh Matheny punched their tickets to the Fukuoka 2023 World Aquatics Championships on Wednesday (June 28) and four swimmers with ties to the Indiana swimming and diving program finished top 10 in the 200-meter breaststroke at the Phillips 66 National Championships inside the Indiana University Natatorium in Indianapolis.
In the women’s event, King and Indiana Swim Club training partner Annie Lazor came in as the No. 2 and No. 3 seeds, respectively, after prelims. The 2020 Olympic medalists reached another podium together as King held off Virginia’s Kate Douglass with the second-fastest time of her career, a 2:20.95. Lazor took bronze in 2:25.86.
King will look to defend her 200 breast world crown after she became the first American swimmer to win a career treble of golds in the 50-100-200 of any stroke at the long course world championships a year ago in Budapest. She remains the second-fastest American ever in the event with her 2:19.92 at the Tokyo Olympics.
Josh Matheny broke Cody Miller’s 200-meter breaststroke program record with a 2:08.32 swim to finish in second place in the men’s race. As the runner-up, he also clinched a spot in USA Swimming’s roster for World Championships, his first time making a senior roster for world championships. Matheny won the event at the 2019 World Junior Championships before joining Indiana in 2021.
Moments before, teammate Jassen Yep set his second lifetime best of the day and won the B final to place ninth nationally.
King and Matheny join a growing list of Hoosiers qualified for the Fukuoka 2023 World Aquatics Championships. Divers Andrew Capobianco, Jessica Parratto and Maxwell Weinrich will also represent Team USA. Mariah Denigan has clinched a spot on the USA Swimming Open Water National Team and associated head coach Cory Chitwood will serve as assistant coach for that discipline. Additionally, international swimmers Marwan Elkamash (Egypt), Tomer Frankel (Israel), Ching Hwee Gan (Singapore), Ahmed Hafnaoui (Tunisia) and Rafael Miroslaw (Germany) have all qualified for their respective national teams.
The Phillips 66 National Championships continue through Saturday (July 1) in Indianapolis as the Hoosiers look to add more cream and crimson to the Team USA roster. Through two days at the meet, Hoosiers have collected 14 personal bests and 26 Olympic Trial cuts.
FOOTNOTE: Â EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
Braun & Hawley slam Biden admin for failure to release all info on COVID-19 origins, demand a full report
WASHINGTON — Today U.S. Senators Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Mike Braun (R-Ind.) sent a letter to Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines, after the Director and the Biden Administration failed to comply with the Senators’ COVID-19 Origin Act of 2023, by releasing an incomplete report on the origins of COVID-19 well beyond the statutory deadline. The Senators demanded that Director Haines provide a new, complete report including any and all information pertaining to the origins of COVID-19, within seven days.
“On March 20, President Biden signed the COVID-19 Origin Act of 2023, which we introduced in the Senate to help get to the truth about China and COVID-19,” the Senators wrote. “That law required the Director of National Intelligence to ‘declassify any and all information’ relating to links between the Wuhan Institute of Virology and the origin of COVID-19. It also required that you ‘submit to Congress’ all of this information ‘not later than 90 days’ after the law’s enactment. You failed to comply with both requirements.”
They continued, “You—and the rest of the Administration—appear to be refusing to provide information about China’s role in and responsibility for the COVID-19 pandemic in order to avoid upsetting Beijing. We invite you to try again. Within 7 business days, provide to Congress documentation that fully complies with the letter of the law to disclose ‘any and all information’ related to the origins of COVID-19 and a lab leak with minimal redactions.”
On Monday, March 20, 2023, President Biden signed into law Senator Hawley’s COVID-19 Origin Act of 2023. It was re-introduced in February of this year and unanimously passed in the Senate that same week. The bill was originally introduced in April 2021 and unanimously passed the Senate in May 2021.
The Honorable Avril Haines
Director of National Intelligence
Office of the Director of National Intelligence
Washington, D.C. 20511
Dear Director Haines:
On March 20, President Biden signed the COVID-19 Origin Act of 2023, which we introduced in the Senate to help get to the truth about China and COVID-19. That law required the Director of National Intelligence to “declassify any and all information†relating to links between the Wuhan Institute of Virology and the origin of COVID-19. It also required that you “submit to Congress†all of this information “not later than 90 days†after the law’s enactment.
You failed to comply with both requirements. The deadline was June 18, 2023. Well past the statutory deadline, your office published a declassified report after business hours on June 23. And the report itself was a paltry five pages of information, plus a cover page and appendix. Obviously, the U.S. government is in possession of more information than that. This half-baked effort falls woefully short of the statutory requirements and undermines congressional intent.
Your failure to comply with the law is especially worrisome in light of recent events. The Biden administration, including ODNI, has exhibited a concerning level of deference towards China, including obfuscating the extent of China’s intelligence cooperation with Cuba and downplaying the seriousness of China’s intelligence collection activities over U.S. airspace. You—and the rest of the Administration—appear to be refusing to provide information about China’s role in and responsibility for the COVID-19 pandemic in order to avoid upsetting Beijing.
We invite you to try again. Within 7 business days, provide to Congress documentation that fully complies with the letter of the law to disclose “any and all information†related to the origins of COVID-19 and a lab leak with minimal redactions. If you fail to do so, we would welcome your testimony before Congress on this matter so you may answer questions under oath. The American people deserve to know the truth about China’s role in the origins of COVID-19.
INDIANAPOLIS—Bills signed into law by Gov. Eric Holcomb will officially take effect on July 1, but while it’s a short race to the finish line, there’s still an opportunity to stumble over a last hurdle.
Protesters gather outside the House Chamber at the Indiana Statehouse Feb. 20 in opposition to HB 1608, Indiana’s so-called “Don’t Say Gay” bill. The General Assembly took up a spate of bills related to LGTBQ and trans rights in the 2023 session. Â Photo by Xain Ballenger, TheStatehouseFile.com.
Last year, Indiana’s near-total abortion ban was challenged by two lawsuits. One asserts the law violates the Indiana Constitution, and the other claims the law violates the state’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act. The former is currently pending before the Indiana Supreme Court.
This year, the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana has returned to court to stop two laws passed during the 2023 legislative season from taking effect.
A law preventing gender transition procedures on minors was temporarily paused with some exceptions June 16 by Judge James Patrick Hanlon of the U.S. District Court for the Southern Indiana District.
And the week prior, the Indiana ACLU filed a lawsuit aimed at House Enrolled Act 1608—signed into law May 4—which says teachers cannot “provide any instruction to a student in prekindergarten through grade 3 on human sexuality,†and schools must inform parents if a student requests to go by new pronouns or a new name.
Southern Indiana District Court Magistrate Judge Kendra Klump has issued an order setting the schedule for the case. Plaintiffs must file their motion for a preliminary injunction by June 27, and the defendants must file their response by July 14.
Senate Enrolled Act 480—gender transition for Minors
Hanlon’s decision was in response to a lawsuit brought by the ACLU on behalf of four families with transgender children and Mosaic Health and Healing Arts.
Located in Goshen, Indiana, Mosaic describes itself as “Indiana’s first family medicine practice that is an openly inclusive and welcoming medical facility to people who identify as LGBTQ2IA+.â€
The services listed on Mosaic’s website range from physicals to yoga to “gender affirming hormone therapy.â€
In an interview with WLFI News after the arguments but before the injunction was handed down, Attorney General Todd Rokita signaled a pause might be on the way.
 Attorney General Todd Rokita.
“Our attorneys did a great job,†Rokita said. “But there’s this 7th Circuit [Court of Appeals] up in Chicago—we’re part of the 7th Circuit—and there’s some pretty controlling law already on the books with regard to, not this particular issue, but similar issues: bathroom cases, some other things.
“And we think that law is—was—stuck in the judge’s mind, and so we’ll have to see how it plays out,†Rokita said.
Hanlon’s preliminary injunction stopped the law’s “prohibitions on gender transition procedures†on the basis of the equal protection clause in the 14th Amendment and, on First Amendment grounds, also paused the section that would prevent physicians from “aid[ing] or abet[ting] another physician or practitioner in the provision of gender transition procedures to a minor.â€
The relevant part of the 14th Amendment reads, “No State shall … deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.â€
“[This] victory is a testament to the trans youth of Indiana, their families, and their allies, who never gave up the fight to protect access to gender-affirming care and who will continue to defend the right of all trans people to be their authentic selves, free from discrimination,†Indiana ACLU legal director Ken Falk said in a statement.
The injunction did not cover the entire law, however, with Hanlon deciding there was no standing to challenge the part that bans gender reassignment surgery since they “are not provided to minors in Indiana.â€
Hanlon agreed with the plaintiffs that sex-based classifications are central to SEA 480’s prohibition. Consequently, heightened scrutiny applies and the state must show that the “classification serves important governmental objectives and that the discriminatory means employed are substantially related to the achievement of those objectives.â€
The court acknowledged the defendants did provide evidence showing puberty blockers and cross-sex hormone therapies carry health risks. Also, the evidence supports the defendants’ view that the safety and effectiveness of puberty blockers and hormone therapy is “uncertain and unsettled.â€
However, Hanlon maintained that heightened scrutiny requires more, in particular an “exceedingly persuasive justification†and a “close mean-end fit.†He noted the plaintiffs presented evidence of the health risks to minors who were not treated for their gender dysphoria.
“So, while the State has identified legitimate reasons for regulation in this area, the designated evidence does not demonstrate, at least at this stage, that the extent of the regulation was closely tailored to uphold those interests,†Hanlon wrote. “Plaintiffs, therefore, have shown some likelihood of success on the merits of their equal protection claim.â€
In a statement provided to The Statehouse File, a spokesperson for the attorney general’s office said the preliminary injunction “is not the end of the story.â€
“The Court openly acknowledges evidence showing the safety and effectiveness of the puberty blockers and hormone therapy are uncertain and unsettled,†the statement continued. “It also recognizes that the State has shown there are good reasons for regulating gender transition procedures for minors. So, our office will continue to defend the democratically passed laws of the Indiana General Assembly, and we will continue to fight for the children.â€
Four days after Hanlon’s decision, U.S. District Judge Jay Moody decided a similar law from Arkansas was unconstitutional. Moody’s decision went beyond Hanlon’s, saying it violated not only the equal protection clause and the First Amendment but also the plaintiffs’ due process.
Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin said in a press release he will appeal the ruling.
House Enrolled Act 1608—human sexuality instruction in schools
The Indiana ACLU’s lawsuit against HEA 1608, which says schools cannot “provide any instruction†to students in grades lower than fourth grade on “human sexuality†but employees and staff can respond to questions regarding human sexuality, claims the language of the law is too broad.
Filed on behalf of an Indianapolis Public Schools teacher, the lawsuit says, “‘instruction … on human sexuality’ is so vague that plaintiff is unable to determine how to conform her behavior to the statute so as to not risk losing her license.â€
In terms of the Indiana ACLU’s specific claims, the organization says it violates the teacher’s rights under the due process clause of the 14th Amendment and the First Amendment.
“During the period of time that she is in the school’s hallways, playground, or before and after school, she has the right to engage in a private speech that the First Amendment protects,†the lawsuit states. “And she certainly has that right when she is outside of the school’s property. Nevertheless, the vague and uncertain meanings of ‘instruction’ and ‘human sexuality’ impose a chill on her ability to exercise her right to express herself as a private citizen on matters of interest to the public.â€
The lawsuit was filed in the Southern District of Indiana District Court. The attorney general’s office did not comment on the lawsuit.
The bill itself has drawn comparisons to a Florida bill that detractors labeled “Don’t Say, Gay.†Signed into law in March of last year, it says, “Classroom instruction by school personnel or third parties on sexual orientation or gender identity may not occur in kindergarten through grade 3 or in a manner that is not age appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students in accordance with state standards.â€
In February, a U.S. District judge said plaintiffs who filed a lawsuit against the bill lacked standing, dismissing the case.
An Education Week article from earlier this year set out to track bills across the country that dealt with similar issues.
It shows that in the past two years, three of Indiana’s border states—Kentucky, Ohio, and Michigan—had bills that were introduced and sent to committees but didn’t progress further.
The Michigan bill would have outlawed instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity if the class is third grade or below or if it wasn’t “age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate.†In Ohio, the piece of legislation had a very similar section.
The bill in Kentucky said teachers couldn’t discuss “sexual orientation, sexual preference, or gender expression inconsistent with biological sex†through eighth grade, or up to twelfth grade, “unless required for instruction of the school’s approved curriculum.â€
Editor’s note: This story was updated to clarify some of Judge Hanlon’s comments on Senate Enrolled Act 480.
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Soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 162nd Infantry Regiment, Oregon Army National Guard, render a salute during the National Anthem at their demobilization ceremony in Albany, Oregon, June 13. The 2-162nd Infantry Battalion spent approximately 10-months in Kabul, Afghanistan, performing various security duties and training Afghan National Police forces. (Photo by Christopher L. Ingersoll, Oregon Military Department Public Affairs)
STATEHOUSE (June 27, 2023) – Hoosier military members are set to receive much-needed tax relief thanks to a new law supported by local lawmakers.
Currently, active-duty service members are eligible for a $5,000 deduction from the state individual income tax. Under the new law recently signed by Gov. Eric Holcomb, active-duty military members will receive a complete income tax exemption beginning in January regardless of their deployment status. National Guard and reserve members already receive a $5,000 deduction, and a full income tax exemption when mobilized or on duty.
“This new law gives back to the men and women in the armed forces who fight to protect our freedoms,” said State Rep. Wendy McNamara (R-Evansville), co-author of the new law. “They have already offered up so much for our country, so it’s important we try help them wherever we can.”
According to State Rep. Tim O’Brien (R-Evansville), other states, including Michigan and Kentucky, offer a full income tax exemption to all service members.
“This new law reaffirms Indiana as a state that welcomes active-duty military members with open arms,” O’Brien said. “This exemption supports these heroes and will hopefully encourage more of them to make Indiana their permanent home after their military career is over.”
“Helping military members keep more of the money they earn is one way Indiana can show that their service is appreciated,†said State Rep. Matt Hostettler (R-Patoka).
EVANSVILLE, IN – Elementary and middle school students in the EVSC’s Summer Programs, K-Camps, as well as students impacted by foster care, recently received a new bicycle, helmet, and bicycle lock, at Harrison High School’s gymnasium through Ivy Tech’s annual Bike Giveaway.
The bicycles will be awarded to students, selected by their camp leaders, who demonstrate good attendance, good behavior, and a good attitude while participating in their programs.
In addition to the standard bikes, two adaptive bicycles that are specifically designed for children who are physically unable to ride a standard bicycle was given away.
Bicycles will be presented to the students by donors, representatives from public safety agencies, EVSC, local dignitaries, and community leaders. The event is funded by generous donations from individuals and businesses across the Tri-State.
This year, the 4,000th bicycle was given away during the ceremony!