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EPD would like the public’s help in identifying this subject

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 The Evansville Police Department would like the public’s help in identifying this subject. Between May 13-May 15, the suspect used multiple stolen checks and stolen ID’s at various bank locations in Evansville and the greater Tri-State area to fraudulently obtain over $30,000. She was driving a black newer model Mitsubishi Outlander sport with a stolen Kentucky license plate. The suspect used checks and ID’s stolen out of vehicles in Evansville and the Tri-State area between May 6-May 12. 

If anyone recognizes this person, they are asked to call the Evansville Police Department’s Financial Crimes Unit at 812-436-7959, or the WeTip Line at 1-800-78-CRIME. 

HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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Aces storm to doubleheader sweep of Sycamores

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Evansville earns pair of wins as Crews has big day
Bouncing-back from a setback of Thursday night, the University of Evansville baseball team battled to a doubleheader sweep of Indiana State, 5-4 (8) and 5-1, on Friday at German American Bank Field at Charles H. Braun Stadium in Evansville.

“Such a special day for this extraordinary group of men. They really responded from a non-competitive day at the yard yesterday and delivered a great performance today,” said Aces head baseball coach Wes Carroll. “On the mound, we got competitive outings from everyone and it was great to see the home runs from Borgstrom, Widder, and Craig. Senior Day tomorrow to send off our four guys that have been an enormous part of our turnaround.”

Game One: Evansville 5, Indiana State 4 (8 inn.)

An evenly played contest from start to finish, Friday’s first game of the doubleheader was well controlled by both team’s starting pitchers. On the mound for the Aces, freshman Donovan Schultz allowed a run in the first inning, but quickly settled in.

Evansville answered in the bottom of the second with a solo homer off the bat of Danny Borgstrom, notching his ninth dinger of the 2021 campaign, tying the game at one.

Indiana State responded in the top of the third with a run on a sacrifice fly that regained a 2-1 advantage for the Sycamores.

Brent Widder ended the trading of runs in the bottom half of the third, giving Evansville its first lead of the day on a two-run home run to left, scoring Simon Scherry and handing the Aces a 3-2 lead.

The seven-inning contest was tied at three by the Sycamores in the top of the sixth with an RBI base-hit from Grant Magill that would prove to be a crucial run, sending the game to extras.

With the international tiebreaker in effect, Indiana State took a 4-3 lead in the top of the eighth, bunting the runner to third and scoring said runner on a sacrifice fly.

Evansville mirrored the Sycamores effort, laying down a bunt to advance Scherry to third, but it was a base-hit by Troy Beilsmith that scored the tying run. After Tanner Craig reached on an error, advancing to second with Beilsmith moving to third, Borgstrom was walked to load the bases.

Following a strikeout that marked the second out of the inning, Kenton Crews came to the plate. On an 0-2 pitch, Crews chopped a ball to the shortstop, who quickly fired to first. Crews utilized his speed to beat out the throw, being called safe at first, walking-off with a 5-4 win for Evansville.

The play at first would be reviewed and the call on the field confirmed.

On in relief, Jakob Meyer earned his fifth win of the season, pitching two innings, not allowing an earned run and striking-out one.

Game Two: Evansville 5, Indiana State 1

Evansville’s offense picked-up right where it left off in game two on Saturday’s doubleheader. The Aces recorded their first run of the contest in the second as Scherry reached on a fielding error by the Sycamore third baseman, scoring Crews.

In the third, Evansville added two more runs as Craig smashed his 12th homer of the season, this time a two-run blast to center, boosting UE’s lead to 3-0.

Aces starter Jake McMahill was impressive on the mound for Evansville, allowing just one hit through three innings and working out of jam in the fourth to preserve the Aces lead.

Indiana State struck for what would be its only run of the game in the fifth as Schaffer lifted a home run to left, narrowing Evansville’s lead to 3-1.

In the fifth, Evansville got its run back and then one more with an RBI double that continued Crews’ hot streak and a sacrifice fly from Wilkes as the Aces held a 5-1 lead.

McMahill’s outing came to a close after the sixth as the redshirt junior allowed one run on seven hits, sitting down three Sycamores via strikeout.

Evansville’s relief pitching was just as sharp as Michael Parks and Drew Dominik shutout Indiana State over the final three innings, combining to throw a trio of strikeouts as Evansville captured the 5-1 win and the doubleheader sweep.

The Aces and Sycamores meet for both teams’ regular-season finales on Evansville’s Senior Day on Saturday at 1 PM at German American Bank Field at Charles H. Braun Stadium in Evansville.

Attorney General Rokita, DWD Commissioner Payne Warn Of Phishing Scam

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Attorney General Todd Rokita is partnering with the Indiana Department of Workforce Development to warn Hoosiers about a phishing scam involving unemployment benefits. Scammers are sending text messages asking Hoosiers to verify their identity by clicking on a link. Clicking the link may give scammers access to your personal data.

“We appreciate the opportunity to partner with state agencies to encourage Hoosiers to be vigilant in protecting their personal information,” Attorney General Todd Rokita said. “Scammers are always coming up with new ways to try to steal your identity and your money. If you receive a text message asking to verify your eligibility for unemployment benefits, I urge you to delete the message and file a report both with my office and the Indiana Department of Workforce Development.”

The Indiana Department of Workforce Development will never send a text message to verify your eligibility for unemployment benefits.

“The fact that scammers are now contacting Hoosiers directly via text message shows just how far they will go in their attempts to steal personal information,” Department of Workforce Development Commissioner Fred Payne said. “DWD has many prevention and detection tools in place to thwart as much fraudulent activity as possible, but individuals still should take the necessary steps to protect their personal information.”

If you have received a suspicious text message or believe you may have been a victim of fraud, contact the Attorney General’s Data Privacy and ID Theft section at indianaconsumer.com, and also contact the Indiana Department of Workforce Development.

Attached is an example of the phishing attempt.

 

Applications now accepted for IDHS Foundation Grants

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Applications now accepted for IDHS Foundation Grants The Indiana Department of Homeland Security (IDHS) has opened the FY2022 IDHS Foundation Grants for applications

The application window has been extended, and applications are due by 4:30 ET on June 2, 2021.

Funds through this program may only be used for and must be consistent with the priority areas of life safety, standard operational items and supplementing current capabilities:

Life safety: These would be immediate lifesaving activities or equipment that a department does not currently have. Examples would include AEDs, extrication equipment, PPEs and gas/air monitoring tools.

Standard operational items: These are items used daily but not used for immediate lifesaving activities and may include items a department already has but that may be broken or outdated. Examples would include a new fire truck ladder to replace one that cannot be repaired, handheld tablets, lighting equipment and portable breath testers.

Supplementing current capabilities: This category covers items or equipment that would allow a public safety department to do more than what it currently can. Examples would include complementary extrication equipment, more high-angle rescue gear and additional wearable cameras (if starting out with some, but not enough for all officers).

To apply, applications must be completed and submitted through the IntelliGrants management system.

Indiana Employment Report 

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 Indiana Employment Report

INDIANAPOLIS (May 21, 2021) – Indiana’s unemployment rate stands at 3.9 percent for April, and the national rate is 6.1 percent. The monthly unemployment rate is a U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) indicator that reflects the number of unemployed people seeking employment within the prior four weeks as a percentage of the labor force.

Indiana’s labor force had a net increase of 145 over the previous month. This was a result of an increase of 955 unemployed residents and a decrease of 810 employed residents.

Indiana’s total labor force, which includes both Hoosiers employed and those seeking employment, stands at 3.34 million, and the state’s 63.1 percent labor force participation rate remains above the national rate of 61.7 percent.

Learn more about how unemployment rates are calculated here: http://www.hoosierdata.in.gov/infographics/employment-status.asp.

April 2021 Employment Charts

Employment by Sector

Private sector employment has increased by 362,400 over the year and decreased by 600 over the previous month. The monthly decrease is primarily due to losses in the Construction (-2,300) and the Leisure and Hospitality (-800) sectors. Losses were offset by gains in the Manufacturing (1,300) and the Private Educational and Health Services (1,300) sectors. Total private employment stands at 2,622,300, which is 118,200 below the new December 2019 peak.

Midwest Unemployment Rates

April 2021 Midwest Unemployment Rates

EDITOR’S NOTES:

Data are sourced from April Current Employment Statistics, Local Area Unemployment Statistics – U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

April employment data for Indiana Counties, Cities and MSAs will be available Monday, May 24, 2021, at noon (Eastern) pending U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics validation.

THE CURE FOR BLACK ROBE FEVER

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THE CURE FOR BLACK ROBE FEVER

 By Jim Redwine

Members of most occupations and all professions including judges and attorneys are obligated to engage in continuing education. In response to both the states of Indiana and Oklahoma’s CLE requirements, I am currently engaged in a forty-hour online Mediation course presented by the National Judicial College in Reno, Nevada. I may subject you, Gentle Reader, to the exciting content of this course before long. Hey, why should I have all the fun alone? But for this week I thought you might prefer another of those true courtroom dramas such as the one presented in last week’s column about my service as a prosecuting attorney that helped keep me from falling too deeply into the Black Robe Syndrome. The case that today’s column about occurs about 25 years ago in front of me in the Posey County, Indiana Circuit Court. To my chagrin, I confess it is all too true and was first confessed to by me in a Gavel Gamut article on August 07, 2006, and appears in the book Gavel Gamut Greetings from JPeg Ranch.

The whole embarrassing courtroom episode reminded me of Dorothy’s serendipitous traipse along the Yellow Brick Road in the land of Oz with the cowardly Lion, the Scarecrow and the Tin Man in search of a brain for the Scarecrow, courage for the Lion, a heart for the Tin Man and the Wizard of Oz for Dorothy. When the mighty Wizard of Oz is finally seen for what he really is by Dorothy his façade of omnipotence gets shattered.

It is probably a good thing that we sometimes have false images of our leaders.  I remember my feelings of dismay when I was told by one of my grade school teachers that the painting of George Washington that hung in our classroom and in which The Father of Our Country looked so stern and powerful portrayed General Washington with his lips tightly pursed because he had ill-fitting false teeth.

And I will not disclose at what advanced age I still clung to Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny.  I might have been slow to catch on but I was happier than my peers.  

We may be wrong, but most humans believe in pomp and circumstance and the regalia of office.  Police officers have badges, soldiers have uniforms and presidents have Air Force One.  We do not need to know about what happens behind the scenes.

Then there are judges.  Judges have courthouses, high benches, gavels and those flowing black robes. Hey, it’s kind’a cool. And, of course, some judges have spouses who are not so easily impressed by all the accoutrements since they see their judges asleep on the couch in dingy tee shirts and torn Levi’s.

But what brings the old “feet of clay” sharply into focus are those unexpected events that occur in court where some citizen decides to act like this is a democracy and he or she is an American.

While there are many instances where I have been made to realize that the trappings were for the office and not for me personally, my wife Peg’s favorite story involved a case from about ten years ago where I was imparting great judicial wisdom and admonitions to a young woman who had been found guilty of stealing.

As I was regaling the full courtroom with the majesty of the law and how it fell so heavily on this poor young miscreant, all of a sudden the huge double doors in the back of the courtroom burst open and a large woman with her hair in curlers wearing a housecoat and bunny slippers charged up towards my bench. She was the young woman’s mother and she was not amused and certainly not impressed by my lecture to her daughter.

The lady stopped just behind the bar that separates the hoi polloi from those who are paid to serve them. She stood to her full height and said very loudly:

“If you weren’t wearing that long black dress,

I’d come up there and slap your face!”

Then she turned and marched slowly and grandly out the back of the courtroom giving me what for the whole time.  The packed courtroom was split between amazement and amusement.

As for me, I knew how the old Wizard of Oz felt.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

Or “Like/Follow” us on Facebook & Twitter at JPegRanchBooks&Knitting

 “Funk In The City” Begins Today

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 Funk in the City Announces 2021 Dates 

Annual Spring Festival Kicks Off Schedule 

Evansville, IN (May 10, 2021) – Following a year of challenges with construction and the COVID-19 pandemic, Haynie’s Corner will be full of activity in 2021 with the return of the annual art festivals and more. 

Funk in the City has worked with the Reopen Evansville Task Force and the Vanderburgh County Health Department to plan safe, fun events that will be inviting for the entire regional community. 

The annual Spring Funk in the City Art Festival will take place on Saturday, May 22nd in historic Haynie’s Corner from 10:00 am – 5:00 pm. 

In addition to the annual Spring and Fall Funk in the City Art Festivals, there will be monthly “mini” Funk events that will encourage attendees to shop & eat within the Haynie’s Corner area. 

Spring Funk in the City Art Festival 

Saturday, May 22nd 

10:00 am – 5:00 pm 

Mini Funk 

Saturday, June 26th 

1:00 pm – 7:00 pm 

Mini Funk 

Saturday, July 31st 

1:00 pm – 7:00 pm 

Mini Funk 

Saturday, August 28th 

1:00 pm – 7:00 pm 

Fall Funk in the City Art Festival 

Saturday, September 25th 

10:00 am – 5:00 pm 

Mini Funk 

Saturday, October 30th 

1:00 pm – 7:00 pm 

Admission to the 2021 Funk in the City events will be FREE, however, donations will be accepted and donated to various local charities. 

For more information, check out the Funk in the City, Inc. Facebook page or follow us at @FunkArtEville on Twitter. 

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Funk in the City, Inc is a local volunteer-driven organization with the mission of providing unique and artistic events and festivals for the tri-state area. Since its founding over ten years ago, Funk in the City has strategically grown its events to attract thousands of festival-goers from around the region and across the country.Â