An executive session will be held prior to the open session.
The executive session is closed as provided by:
I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(5): To receive information about and interview prospective employees.
I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(6)(A): With respect to any individual over whom the governing body has jurisdiction to receive information concerning the individual’s alleged misconduct.
I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(9): To discuss a job performance evaluation of individual employees. This subdivision does not apply to a discussion of the salary, compensation, or benefits of employees during a budget process.
OPEN SESSION:
CALL TO ORDER:
ACKNOWLEDGE GUESTS:
APPROVAL OF MINUTES:
June 12th, 2023 (Sutton, Johnson-Kincaid)
APPROVAL OF CLAIMS:
PROBATIONARY OFFICER UPDATE:
Update for officers in the FTO Program
Final Merit Interview for the following Probationary Officers: Leighton Reisinger, Jesse Neikirk, Corey Scott, Brandt McGill, Jerron Miller, Alec McNeely, Colter Trueblood, Robert Hollis, Trevis Bell, Robert Morrow
NEW DISCIPLINE:
23-PO-19 – Officer Brian Hessler, Badge Number 1211 – 1 Day Suspension (Appealed – Set for Hearing)
APPLICANTS:
23-024
SWORN AWARDS/COMMENDATIONS:
Review award recommendation for two officers involved in an incident that occurred on April 9th, 2023 in the 100-block of E Iowa St. (Tabled from last meeting.)
CIVILIAN AWARDS/RECOMMENDATIONS:
Review of actions from a civilian involved in the incident that occurred on January 19th, 2023 at Wal-Mart West.
REMINDERS:
The next scheduled meeting is Monday, July 10th, 2023 at 4:00pm.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – On Sunday, the Cincinnati Reds called up former Evansville Otters pitcher Randy Wynne to the major leagues.
Wynne signed with the Reds organization out of Evansville in June of 2019.
“We couldn’t be happier for Randy,†Otters field manager Andy McCauley said. “He is a great pitcher and always gave us his best. We wish him the best of luck.â€
The former Otter joins Brandyn Sittinger, Brad Ziegler, Justin James, R.J. Swindle, and Travis Schlichting on a list of players that Andy McCauley managed and later made it to the big leagues.
Wynne, from San Diego, California, signed and played for the Otters throughout 2018 and began the 2019 season in Evansville.
The right-hander was undrafted out of Missouri Baptist University and began his professional career in the United Shore League with the Birmingham-Bloomfield Beavers in 2016 and 2017.
“Randy has worked really hard to get to this point in his career,†Otters pitching coach Max Peterson said. “We are proud of the work he’s put in to get to this moment.â€
In 30 career games with the Otters, Wynne compiled a 14-11 record and 3.52 ERA with 161 strikeouts across 184.1 innings. He threw four complete games in 2018, tied for fifth-most in a single season in Otters history. His 5-2 start to 2019 helped earn him the contract purchase from the Reds.
The 30-year-old will make his Major League debut after four Minor League seasons in 2019 and 2021-23.
This season with Triple-A Louisville, Wynne has a 2-1 record in his seven starts, grabbing 19 strikeouts across his 31.1 innings.
Wynne joins three other former Otters to get the call-up to The Show, joining pitchers Sittinger, George Sherrill and Andrew Werner.
Sittinger played a few games in the majors before returning to the affiliated ranks in 2022. Sherrill went on to a lengthy MLB career from 2004-12 for four franchises and an All-Star selection in 2008. Werner pitched for the San Diego Padres in 2012 and then later moved on to become a baseball pitching coach after his stint in MLB.
The Evansville Otters are the 2006 and 2016 Frontier League champions.
Please join us for a chat with Tananarive Due about her newest work, The Wishing Pool and Other Stories. The second collection of stories by the author is full of her signature offerings of horror, science fiction, and suspense while confronting monsters of all kinds, including racism, the monster within, and the supernatural. Due’s prolific body of work cements the author as a leading voice in black speculative fiction for more than 20 years. Due is an award-winning writer, educator, and producer. Her body of work includes sixteen books, including The Blood Colony,
The Living Blood, The Good House, Joplin’s Ghost, Devil’s Wake, and the forthcoming The Reformatory. In addition, she is a contributing author of Black Panther: Tales of Wakanda and Black Panther: Sins of the King. Collaborating with her partner Steven Barnes, she also co-wrote “A Small Town†for Season 2 of Jordan Peele’s “The Twilight Zone†on Paramount Plus and two segments of Shudder’s anthology film Horror Noire.
About the Author: Tananarive Due is an American Book Award–winning, Essence bestselling author of sixteen books. She was also a contributor to Jonathan Maberry’s middle-grade anthology, Don’t Turn Out the Lights. She has won an American Book Award, an NAACP Image Award, and a British Fantasy Award. She teaches Black Horror and Afrofuturism at UCLA. She lives in Atlanta, Georgia. Visit her website TananariveDue.com.
Florence, Ky. – The Evansville Otters hit a franchise tying eight doubles and Dakota Phillips had four extra base hits in a 14-4 series winning victory over the Florence Y’alls.
The Otters had 10 total extra base-hits Sunday afternoon as part of a 15-hit outburst. Phillips’ massive day finished with four total hits with three doubles and a home run, four RBIs and four runs.
Phillips’ three doubles tied the Otters single-game player record. Evansville finished with a season-best 31 total runs across the series.
The Otters jumped on the Y’alls early as Phillips had an RBI double in the first. Ethan Skender hit a double and would come around to score on a wild pitch to add another run in the second.
Phillips went back to work in the third with a leadoff double and scored as part of a two run inning to give the Otters a 5-0 lead.
Florence got two back on a home run in the bottom of third. Evansville responded by blowing the game open with a three run fourth inning as Kona Quiggle notched an RBI hit before Phillips launched a two run blast.
Three more runs scored in both the sixth and seventh for Evansville. Phillips hit his record-tying double to bring in the final two runs of the game in the seventh.
Aaron Beck continued his excellent start to the year with two doubles of his own as part of a three-hit day. The Evansville native finished his first week of professional play with eighth hits in five starts.
Parker Brahms earned the win from the mound, completing six innings with four runs allowed and six strikeouts. Leoni De La Cruz, Kevin Davis and Jake Polancic combined to work three scoreless innings to close out the win.
All nine Otters starters scored a run as the team scored the second most runs and the second most hits of any game this season.
Jomar Reyes extended his Otters’ long on-base streak to 18 games. Evansville has plated at least five runs in their last four games with a home run in all four.
Evansville returns to Bosse Field on Tuesday to open a three game series against the Gateway Grizzlies. A 6:35 PM CT first pitch kicks off of a Fifth Third Bank Family Night.
Families of four can receive four general admission tickets, four hot dogs, four bags of chips and four drinks all for $40 ($55 value). Click here for more information. First pitch is slated for 6:35 PM CT.
All home and road Otters games this season are televised on FloSports with audio-only coverage available for free on the Evansville Otters YouTube page.
The Evansville Otters are the 2006 and 2016 Frontier League champions.
Schedule:Full-Time, 8-hour day shift, Monday-Friday. Provide direct support to Ascension Leadership Team (ALT) member(s) to enable informed decision making,…
Schedule: Day Shift/ 10 Hours Rotating/ 8:00 am to 6: 30 pm/ On Call, Weekends, and Holidays Required. Perform terminal cleaning of each operating room daily,…
Schedule: Days 8 -hour shifts Monday – Friday. Help patients navigate through their health care needs by assisting with referrals, insurance authorizations,…
Sign-on bonus: $10,000. Department: Geriatric Psychiatry Nursing Unit. Schedule: 12-hour NIGHT shift, Monday – Friday, with every other weekend and rotating…
As a Spiritual Care Manager, you will lead and manage a continuum of spiritual care services across a ministry market region that aligns with the professional…
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.
By his own admission, detailed in his memoir, the surviving son of President Joe Biden is an addict who has made addict choices. Such choices often bring heartache to families and other loved ones, violate basic ethical concepts and break the law.
Hunter Biden’s addict choices landed him in legal trouble serious enough to warrant having him enter a plea deal. In that agreement, he pleaded guilty to federal misdemeanor charges that he failed to pay taxes.
In return, a federal felony charge that he owned a firearm illegally likely will be dismissed, provided he complies with certain conditions.
He will do no prison time.
The plea deal has enraged conservatives, who contend that the younger Biden is being treated too leniently.
They’re right—but, as so often is the case, not in the way they think.
The most serious charge the president’s son faced was the gun charge. His apologists argue that the law he violated is rarely used except in circumstances far more extreme than this one. This, they say, is proof that Hunter Biden’s family connection to power and prominence worked against him.
Perhaps, but the reality is that the charge went away because the same conservatives who want the younger Biden’s head served on a platter made it difficult, possibly even, impossible to convict him.
Biden’s lawyers planned to offer a Second Amendment defense to the felony charge. In doing so, they would have relied on a U.S. Supreme Court ruling drafted by Justice Clarence Thomas, no friend of the Biden family or Democratic politicians in general.
Just last year, Thomas wrote the majority opinion in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. vs. Bruen. That ruling was informed by the National Rifle Association’s reasoning—advanced through years of advocacy and litigation—that deadly weapons should be made available in vending machines and the people who purchase them should not be compelled in any way to store or use them safely.
Thomas’s opinion decreased the chances of prosecutors securing a conviction on the gun charge immeasurably, so they took what they could get.
In other words, conservatives provided Hunter Biden with the key to unlock his jail cell.
There may be poetic justice in that but there’s no justice in the other part of the plea deal.
Because of that plea agreement, we now know that the younger Biden failed to pay more than $100,000 in taxes in 2017 and 2018.
That’s about half-again as much as the median household income in the United States.
The fact that cheating on his taxes and shifting more than six figures worth of the weight of running the country onto other people’s shoulders merits only a misdemeanor conviction is a crime.
I felt that way when it was revealed that former President Donald Trump had evaded paying taxes on his hush-money payment to a porn star.
I feel the same way about Hunter Biden doing it.
Wrong is wrong.
Period.
The party label of the person who does the wrong in question shouldn’t matter.
When guys like Donald Trump and Hunter Biden shirk their responsibilities as taxpaying citizens, other people—many of whom earn less than either man spends on drycleaning his suits—must make up the difference.
The Hunter Bidens and Donald Trumps of the world think this makes them look slick and smart—savvy operators who figured out how to game the system.
It doesn’t.
It just makes them appear pathetic, scavengers who feed off the efforts of people more hardworking and responsible than they are.
Conservatives think Hunter Biden got off easy.
They’re right about that.
But the fact that he was able to duck the gun charge is their own fault. If they hadn’t spent two generations trying to turn this country into a shooter’s paradise, Hunter Biden likely would be facing prison time and America would be a much safer place.
As for the tax evasion charges, it wouldn’t have broken my heart to see the younger Biden locked up for that offense.
Maybe he even could have shared a prison cell with a certain former president who also hates to pay taxes
FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The views expressed are those of the author only and should not be attributed to Franklin College.
Concord posts record bar passage while hoping for admission from Indiana Supreme Court
By Marilyn Odendahl, The Indiana Citizen
The Indiana Supreme Court, is located inside the Indiana Statehouse in downtown Indianapolis. Â Photo by The Indiana Citizen.
While continuing to await a decision on whether its graduates can take the Indiana Bar Exam, Concord Law School, the online legal institution that is part of Purdue University Global, is trumpeting its February bar passage rate as proof its graduates can meet the requirements to be lawyers in the Hoosier state.
Concord presented a proposal to the Indiana Supreme Court in 2022 that would allow the school’s graduates to sit for the state’s lawyer licensing test. Currently, only graduates of law schools accredited by the American Bar Association are permitted to take the Indiana bar.
The ABA has not accredited Concord, in part, because the school has no brick-and-mortar location and offers its curriculum fully online. Concord enrolls students from across the country but since it is only accredited by the Committee of Bar Examiners of the State Bar of California, the graduates can only sit for the bar exam and be licensed to practice in the Golden State.
All states give their bar exams two times a year, in February and July. Scores are divided between those who are taking the test for the first time and those who are taking it again.
Concord posted a record pass rate of 62% among first-time takers of the California bar in the February. This is same as the first-time pass rate for Indiana’s February bar.
Martin Pritikin, dean of Concord, hopes the performance will calm some apprehension within the Indiana legal community.
“We can essentially perform as well or better than ABA (accredited) schools and do it completely online for a third of the cost,†Pritikin said. “If we can achieve those outcomes, what real good reason is there not to – at least – give us a try?â€
A working group the Indiana Supreme Court assembled to study Concord’s proposal submitted a report in February 2023 outlining the pros and cons of allowing the school’s graduates to take the Indiana bar. Among the concerns were Concord’s academic standards and bar passage rates.
In March, the Supreme Court released the working group’s report and asked for reaction. The feedback has not been made public but the state’s highest court said recently it “deeply appreciates†the comments.
Currently, the Supreme Court is “proceeding cautiously and checking with the American Bar Association about the potential for accreditation,†according to Kathryn Dolan, spokeswoman for the court. No final decision has been made about letting Concord graduates take the Indiana bar.
Pritikin is confident the success of Concord graduates on the California bar would translate to equal – or better – success on the Indiana exam. In particular, the California test has a minimum pass score of 278, which is higher than Indiana’s 264, but the exams are similar.
“The issue spotter questions, the type of answers you’re looking for, the format, it’s virtually identical,†Pritikin said. “There’s a slight difference about what legal subject matter might be asked but other than that, the bar exams are almost identical.â€
Expected upswing
The Purdue-affiliated law school has previously produced some abysmally low bar scores, dropping to an all-time low of 13% for first-time takers of the February 2017 California bar. Since 2021, Concord’s pass rate has swung between a low of 42% and a high of 57%.
Pritikin said the 62% pass rate is not a fluke. Rather the score is a culmination of changes to the school’s curriculum and the shifting of resources that have taken place since he became dean seven years ago.
In the classroom, students are given periodic quizzes, requiring them to apply what they have learned, rather than being given one exam at the end of the course as most law schools do. Also, the students are tested each year on the material taught the previous year and the subjects are integrated across the curriculum so the students encounter the material multiple times.
“We mapped everything out holistically across courses within a given term and also across terms,†Pritikin said explaining Concord’s approach to teaching the law. “In their first two terms, (the students) take contracts, torts and introduction to legal analysis, which is like a writing class. Those are corequisite because the assignments they get in the writing class are actually coordinated with what they’re learning in their substantive classes.â€
Concord has also focused on bar prep, subsidizing 80% of the cost of the Kaplan Bar Review program for its students. Moreover, the school has hired a full-time director of bar support to provide coaching for bar takers.
The bar support director “not only gives them a study plan to help them stay on top and make sure that they’re practicing but also kind of works on the psychological part of taking the bar,†Pritikin said. “Some people get stressed out about taking timed exams. Some people kind of psych themselves out about performing under high pressure. He helps them with those things as well.â€
Concord’s February pass rate came from just 13 California bar graduates. By comparison, 169 individuals took the Indiana exam in February.
Pritikin said Concord has been growing its enrollment since being accredited by California in 2020 and he expects 20 to 30 more Concord graduates will sit for the California bar in 2024. Also, he anticipates the bar passage rate will remain high.
“I think because we have these holistic supports in place, it’s not going to depend on ‘Oh we happen to have a few stellar students this time,’†Pritikin said. “I think it’s more systemic. I think it’s going to last.â€
FOOTNOTE: This article was published by TheStatehouseFile.com through a partnership with The Indiana Citizen (indianacitizen.org), a nonpartisan, nonprofit platform dedicated to increasing the number of informed, engaged Hoosier citizens.
Marilyn Odendahl has spent her journalism career writing for newspapers and magazines in Indiana and Kentucky. She has focused her reporting on business, the law and poverty issues.
An executive session will be held prior to the open session.
The executive session is closed as provided by:
I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(5): To receive information about and interview prospective employees.
I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(6)(A): With respect to any individual over whom the governing body has jurisdiction to receive information concerning the individual’s alleged misconduct.
I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(9): To discuss a job performance evaluation of individual employees. This subdivision does not apply to a discussion of the salary, compensation, or benefits of employees during a budget process.
OPEN SESSION:
CALL TO ORDER:
ACKNOWLEDGE GUESTS:
APPROVAL OF MINUTES:
June 12th, 2023 (Sutton, Johnson-Kincaid)
APPROVAL OF CLAIMS:
PROBATIONARY OFFICER UPDATE:
Update for officers in the FTO Program
Final Merit Interview for the following Probationary Officers: Leighton Reisinger, Jesse Neikirk, Corey Scott, Brandt McGill, Jerron Miller, Alec McNeely, Colter Trueblood, Robert Hollis, Trevis Bell, Robert Morrow
NEW DISCIPLINE:
23-PO-19 – Officer Brian Hessler, Badge Number 1211 – 1 Day Suspension (Appealed – Set for Hearing)
APPLICANTS:
23-024
SWORN AWARDS/COMMENDATIONS:
Review award recommendation for two officers involved in an incident that occurred on April 9th, 2023 in the 100-block of E Iowa St. (Tabled from last meeting.)
CIVILIAN AWARDS/RECOMMENDATIONS:
Review of actions from a civilian involved in the incident that occurred on January 19th, 2023 at Wal-Mart West.Â
REMINDERS:Â
The next scheduled meeting is Monday, July 10th, 2023 at 4:00pm.
A. An executive session will be held prior to the open session.
B. The executive session is closed as provided by:
1. I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(5): To receive information about and interview prospective
employees.
2. I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(6)(A): With respect to any individual over whom the governing
body has jurisdiction to receive information concerning the individual’s alleged
misconduct.
3. I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(9): To discuss a job performance evaluation of individual
employees. This subdivision does not apply to a discussion of the salary,
compensation, or benefits of employees during a budget process.
2. OPEN SESSION:
A. CALL TO ORDER:
B. ACKNOWLEDGE GUESTS:
C. APPROVAL OF MINUTES:
a. June 12 th , 2023 (Sutton, Johnson-Kincaid)
D. APPROVAL OF CLAIMS:
E. PROBATIONARY OFFICER UPDATE:
a. Update for officers in the FTO Program
b. Final Merit Interview for the following Probationary Officers: Leighton
Reisinger, Jesse Neikirk, Corey Scott, Brandt McGill, Jerron Miller, Alec
McNeely, Colter Trueblood, Robert Hollis, Trevis Bell, Robert Morrow
F. NEW DISCIPLINE:
a. 23-PO-19 – Officer Brian Hessler, Badge Number 1211 – 1 Day Suspension
(Appealed – Set for Hearing)
G. APPLICANTS:
a. 23-024
H. SWORN AWARDS/COMMENDATIONS:
a. Review award recommendation for two officers involved in an incident that
occurred on April 9 th , 2023 in the 100-block of E Iowa St. (Tabled from last
meeting.)
I. CIVILIAN AWARDS/RECOMMENDATIONS:
a. Review of actions from a civilian involved in the incident that occurred on
January 19 th , 2023 at Wal-Mart West.
J. REMINDERS:
a. The next scheduled meeting is Monday, July 10 th , 2023 at 4:00pm.
K. ADJOURNMENT: