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Holiday World Hosts “Play Day” For Kids With Disabilities

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Holiday World hosts “Play Day” for kids with disabilities WED., MAY 17; will donate more than $33,000 to support Easterseals Rehabilitation Center.

HOLIDAY WORLD will welcome more than 3,000 children with disabilities, their teachers, and chaperones for a day of fun at the 31st annual HOLIDAY WORLD “PLAY DAY” on Wednesday, May 17 from 9am until 2pm CDT. The park will open ONLY for children with special needs, their teachers, and adult chaperones. School groups (preschool through high school) from throughout southern Indiana, southern Illinois and western Kentucky participate in the special day, which is a highlight of the year for many area students with disabilities.

For the 31st consecutive year, Holiday World is donating all Play Day admissions (the combined total of an $11 donation by each person attending Play Day) to Easterseals. Previous Play Day funds have supported many life-changing programs, provided essential therapy equipment, and underwritten thousands of therapy sessions. Including this year’s estimated donation, Play Day proceeds donated to Easterseals have now exceeded $610,000 since the event began in 1993.

The Easterseals Rehabilitation Center serves approximately 5,300 children and adults with disabilities from a 30-county area. Holiday World’s support helps to make a profound, positive difference in the lives of Tri-State individuals with disabilities every day.

Vanderburgh County Marriage Licences

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marriage
marriage

 

Vanderburgh County Marriage Licences

Newspaper Report

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

20230516021858359

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

Todd Young Takes A Stand

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Todd Young Takes A Stand

MAY 15, 2023

U.S. Sen. Todd Young, R-Indiana, performed a service for his country, his party and his own soul the other day.

\On the day after former President Donald Trump’s trainwreck of a town hall on CNN, Young told reporters he does not want Trump to be the GOP’s candidate for the White House in 2024.

When the reporters asked Young why he opposed Trump’s renomination, the Indiana senator responded, “Where do I begin?”

Certainly, Trump’s CNN appearance gave Young many reasons to object to seeing the former reality TV star’s return to the Oval Office.

During his hour on the air, Trump said that he was okay with the United States defaulting on its debt payments—even though the bulk of the money involved is owed to the American people. He also said he didn’t care which side won in the Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine. He excused the Jan. 6, 2021, mob attack on the U.S. Capitol and said he would pardon those who convicted of crimes involved in the coup attempt.

And just a day after a jury had found him liable of sexual abuse and defamation, he again gratuitously defamed the woman who sued him, possibly exposing himself to another lawsuit.

Many words describe Trump’s performance.

Honest, inspiring and statesman-like are not among those words.

Yet even though the former president continues to debase himself, his party and the great office he once held, remarkably few Republicans have been willing to speak the truth—that Donald Trump is unfit to be president.

That is what makes Young’s stand refreshing.

He expressed his opposition to the former president’s return to power clearly but with understated dignity.

Consider the way Young took issue with Trump’s stance on the Russia-Ukraine war.

“I think President Trump’s judgment is wrong in this case. President [Vladimir] Putin and his government have been engaged in war crimes. I don’t believe that’s disputed,” Young said.

In his quiet way, Young made a case not just for America’s continued support of Ukraine but also for something even larger.

The belief that the truth matters.

One of the most tragic things about Trump’s rise has been this country’s accompanying descent into a fury-filled national food fight in which fact and fantasy are supposed to bear equal weight and be accorded equal respect.

This descent has made it increasingly easy for Americans of all points of view to dismiss others’ right to disagree. Correspondingly, it also has made it increasingly difficult for us to live together as neighbors and fellow citizens.

I don’t know Todd Young that well, but, when I’ve been around him, I’ve sensed his profound uneasiness with this national dynamic.

He is a man conservative to his core, but his own convictions do not prevent him from treating those with differing beliefs with respect. He believes in a marketplace of ideas and has confidence that, on balance, the ideas to which he adheres will prevail if truth and falsehood are allowed to joust.

Making sure that truth and falsehood would have to joust is the philosophic underpinning of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, the reason we protect free speech, a free press and freedom of conscience.

Young has taken oaths to support and defend the Constitution.

He’s a man who takes oaths seriously.

One of the most poignant episodes during Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election took place when a group of the former president’s followers cornered Young and tried to get the senator to back the coup attempt.

Young said he couldn’t do that.

“I took an oath,” he said to the Trump backers, feeling flooding his voice. “Do you understand what that means?”

I disagree with Todd Young on important issues.

But that’s okay.

That’s the way this system of self-government—this country—is supposed to work.

He trots out his ideas, others trot out theirs and, if the debate continues long enough, eventually the best idea wins.

That is, if all involved in the debate speak from a place of honest conviction.

Donald Trump doesn’t do that.

He has no more understanding of duty or moral responsibility than a tornado or a hurricane does.

That’s why he doesn’t belong back in the White House.

It’s not a question of ideology.

It’s a question of character.

That’s what Todd Young grasps—and why he took the stand he did./

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.

Attorney General Rokita seeks to depose Indy Star reporter in Bernard case

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Attorney General Rokita seeks to depose Indy Star reporter in Bernard case

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The request Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita’s office made in late April to delay the case against Caitlin Bernard pending before the Indiana Medical Licensing Board came after an apparent change in the state’s lead counsel and accompanied a push to reopen some of the previous discovery and depose additional individuals, including a reporter for The Indianapolis Star.

In an order filed on April 28, the medical licensing board denied the motion filed by the attorney general’s office to postpone the May hearing until August. The board also turned down Bernard’s motion to prevent the state from taking her deposition but did grant Bernard’s motion to shield her responses to the discovery from public disclosure.

Neither the attorney general’s office nor Bernard’s attorneys at Hoover Hull Turner in Indianapolis responded to a request for comment from The Indiana Citizen.

Bernard, an OB/GYN for IU Health, will appear before the MLB on May 25. She will defend her medical license against the attorney general’s allegations that she failed to report child abuse and violated patient privacy laws.

The administrative action filed by the attorney general stems from revelations that Bernard performed an abortion in the summer of 2022 for a 10-year-old Ohio girl who was raped and became pregnant. After the story was reported by Star journalist Shari Rudavsky, Rokita made a series of public statements accusing Bernard of violating the law and revealing his office was investigating her actions.

Rudavsky is among those whom Rokita’s office wants to depose. According to the attorney general’s April 25 motion for continuance, Rudavsky was notified that her deposition had been scheduled for April 20. When attorney Tracy Betz, partner at Taft Stettinius & Hollister in Indianapolis, told the attorney general April 19 she was representing Rudavsky, the parties agreed to scratch the deposition date.

Betz was given time to confer with her client and determine how she would respond to the deposition notice. According to the attorney general’s motion, the Taft attorney has not responded to the deposition notice.

Betz did not respond to a request for comment from The Indiana Citizen.

Bernard, in her April 26 response to the state’s continuance motion, argued in part that the attempt to depose Rudavsky was not a valid reason to delay the hearing.

“The State should not be surprised if Rudavsky resists testifying as reporters often decline to testify about stories,” Bernard stated in her filing. “If the State believed this deposition was needed, it should have sought it anytime in December, January, February, or March.”

Changes in the AG office

The motions filed by the attorney general’s office in April were submitted by the director of complex litigation, Cory Voight. Previously, the documents in the case had been filed by Mary Hutchison, who was chief of the licensing enforcement section.

Bernard’s April 26 motion stated Hutchison is was one of four attorneys representing the state in this case. Two of the other attorneys are Gene Schaerr and Christopher Bartolomucci from Schaerr Jaffe, the Washington, D.C., boutique firm. The fourth attorney was not identified.

While Hutchison was the supervisor, the licensing enforcement section received the consumer complaints filed against Bernard that sparked the attorney general’s investigation. Many of the complaints referenced Bernard terminating the pregnancy of the 10-year-old girl.

However, Hutchison resigned in March, one of four deputy attorneys general handling the Bernard matters who left the attorney general’s office earlier this year, according to The Indiana Capital Chronicle.  She is now listed on the Indiana Roll of Attorneys as working for the Hamilton County Prosecutor’s Office.

Since Hutchison’s departure, Voight has told the MLB more time is needed to prepare for the hearing. The attorney general’s office wants to reopen the written discovery process as well as conduct discovery on a document that Bernard said is from her employer and absolves her of wrongdoing.

Moreover, the attorney general’s office wants to depose additional individuals, including the physician Bernard was speaking to at the reproductive rights rally in June 2022. Rudavsky overheard Bernard mention an Ohio girl needing an abortion and, after getting confirmation from the OB/GYN, included it in a story published in the Star in July.

“This Motion is not made for the purpose of delay but out of necessity so that the parties may develop and present a full case to the Board for its consideration and judgment,” Voight stated in the April 25 motion.

Bernard’s legal team opposed the request for a continuance, telling the board delaying the hearing would be harmful to Bernard.

“The State’s attorneys made decisions about the information they wanted to obtain and present before the Board in the almost five months since they filed the Administrative Complaint,” Bernard responded “The Parties can be ready for the hearing on May 25. To provide the State with additional time to seek discovery it chose not to seek earlier would be unfair to Dr. Bernard.”

In the April 28 order, the MLB did give the opposing side some leeway to conduct more dispositions. The board is allowing the parties to depose any individual who was either given notice prior to April 24 or disclosed for the first time on the final witness list. Also, any individual who both parties mutually agree upon can be deposed.

Deposition dispute

Bernard also resisted the attorney general’s request she sit for a deposition. According to court documents, the state’s top lawyer had scheduled the proceeding to begin April 21, then “continue from day to day until completed.”

The OB/GYN told the MLB she had already provided the information the attorney general was seeking. She maintained the answers she gave in the deposition and testimony as part of the Bernard v. Rokita, 49C01-2211-MI-038101, lawsuit would be the same responses she would give in the MLB proceeding.

Also, she said she had responded to the state’s questions, including those about her training on reporting requirements; how she learned of the abuse of the 10-year-old victim; her communications with law enforcement; her practice for reporting child abuse; her training on patient privacy; and any other investigations into her professional conduct.

The attorney general disputed Bernard’s assertions, telling the MLB the doctor is trying to prevent the state and the board from “learning the extent and context of (her) conduct, as well as learning the existence of all witnesses.”

In particular, the attorney general argued Bernard did not testify “in substantial part” about her education and training in patient privacy laws and regulations; her understanding of her employer’s policies on patient privacy and reporting of child abuse; her knowledge of the IU Health Risk Assessment document; prior communication with the reporter; all individuals who may have been in the vicinity when she talked to she reporter; and any communications she had with the social worker who reported to Ohio after the report was made.

Further, the attorney general stated the two-hour deposition Bernard gave for Bernard v. Rokita was inadequate.  The deposition did not cover all the issues included in the MLB proceedings, according to the attorney general, and Bernard’s attorney objected about 30 times, instructing the doctor not to answer while the trial court “largely sustained the objections.”

In its response to Bernard’s motion to prevent or limit her deposition, the attorney general’s office asserted the state would be at an “unfair disadvantage” if the MLB did not allow Bernard to be deposed.

“[The state’s] inability to depose [Bernard] on all potentially relevant topics and to vigorously question to obtain a full picture of each topic based upon [her] recollection will place [the state] in a position of not knowing the full scope of [Bernard’s] knowledge on the relevant issues before the Board,” the attorney general’s office told the MLB.

Bernard’s legal counsel countered the OB/GYN has already testified under oath specifically to the state’s allegations that she violated patient confidentiality laws and Indiana’s mandatory child abuse reporting law as well as to “other tangentially related subjects.”

“The State’s proposed, unrestricted deposition would keep Dr. Bernard away from her patients and her students to ask her questions to which she has already given an answer,” Bernard’s lawyers argued. “This is the epitome of duplicative and oppressive discovery.”

In denying Bernard’s motion to prevent or limit her deposition, the MLB found limits were “not necessary to prevent duplicative or oppressive discovery.” However, the board did agree to limit the attorney general’s questions that are based upon the parties’ factual stipulations, finding those questions would be “unnecessarily duplicative.”

Bernard and the attorney general’s office were ordered to file a joint stipulation by May 23 of all the facts not in dispute.

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.

Eastland Mall Incident

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epd police car

Yesterday at 6:53 p.m., two EPD officers were sitting in the Eastland Mall parking lot (800 N. Green River Rd.) finishing a report. Officers noticed people running out of the mall yelling that ‘shots were fired.’ Around the same time, Vanderburgh County Central Dispatch begin receiving calls for a large fight involving guns. Officers rushed in and located the scene. Two Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Deputies were working off-duty within Eastland Mall during the incident and also responded to the fight; deputies reported never hearing shots fired inside of Eastland Mall before, during or after the initial run came out.

Eastland Mall was put on lockdown and evacuated. Officers obtained descriptions of the suspects. Officers and all responding law enforcement personnel began searching and clearing individual stores looking for possible victims and suspects. During the search, an extended handgun magazine was located near the center of the mall.

Four males matching the description of the suspects were detained, two of which had fled outside. A handgun was also located outside. A total of five males were transported to EPD headquarters to be interviewed. During the investigation it was determined no shots were actually fired within Eastland Mall. This incident had potential to be much worse if it wasn’t for the quick response of the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office and the Evansville Police Department.

Two juvenile males have been arrested for charges of: Disorderly Conduct and Dangerous Possession of a Firearm, a level 5 felony. This investigation is still very active and Eastland Mall security footage is still being reviewed. Once the investigation is complete, future arrests may occur.

USI recognizes over 1,700 students named to the 2023 Spring Dean’s List

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In recognition of outstanding academic achievement, the University of Southern Indiana Dean’s List has been released for the 2023 Spring Semester. Dr. Mohammed Khayum, USI Provost, announced a total of 1,791 undergraduate students were named to the Dean’s List.

Graduate students are not eligible for the Dean’s List.

Undergraduate students must achieve a 3.5 or better semester GPA (on a 4.0 system) to be named to the list. Students earning no incomplete (IN) or missing (Z) grades for the term and earning letter grades of computable point value (Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory and Pass/No Pass graded courses do not apply) in 12 or more semester hours, with a semester GPA between 3.5 and 4.0, are named to the list.

The list is arranged by state and city, according to the mailing address each student has provided to the University. A student’s name may be listed under Evansville if the student supplied an Evansville mailing address. The Dean’s List may be accessed by clicking the link below.

2023 Spring Semester Dean’s List

Note to students: 

If you expected your name to be on the list and you cannot find it, use the search function in the PDF document. Type your name to search the entire list. If you still do not find your name, email Tracy Sinn in the Registrar’s Office using your myUSI email address (include your full name and student ID number). If it can be verified you did qualify for the Dean’s List, the Registrar’s Office will give University Strategic Communication your name and hometown.