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Otters even series behind Portela’s strong start

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The Evansville Otters rode early offense and a fantastic start from Polo Portela to a 5-3 victory over the Joliet Slammers Wednesday, evening the weekday series at one game apiece.

 

The Otters took an early lead in the bottom of the first, when they set the table for J.R. Davis by putting runners on the corners with nobody out. Davis drove in the first run of the ballgame with an RBI double into the left-center field gap that scored Miles Gordon easily from third.

The Otters would add two more runs the following batter, as Riley Krane drove in Elijah MacNamee and J.R. Davis with a base hit to right center, giving the Otters a 3-0 lead.

 

Evansville added a couple more runs in the bottom of the fourth, as Davis netted his second RBI-hit of the day with a one-out single scoring Gordon and Dakota Phillips drove in the Otters last run of the ballgame with two outs. The Otters then led 5-0.

 

Joliet scored their first and only run off Polo Portela in the top of the fifth, when Zack Costello scored Alonzo Jones Jr. from third on an RBI groundout to short.

Portela would end up throwing seven innings of one-run ball, striking out eight while scattering four hits.

 

Tyler Spring came on to work in his first appearance since being activated off the injured list earlier Wednesday afternoon, giving up two runs in the eighth on a Braxton Davidson home run to right. The Slammers cut the Otters lead to two, but the score would hold at 5-3 for the final.

 

Logan Sawyer came on in the top of the ninth to nail down the save. After back-to-back leadoff hits, Sawyer struck out Zack Costello for the first out before getting Tyler Depreta-Johnson to ground into a 4-6-3 double play.

 

Sawyer picked up his ninth save of the season, while Polo Portela (5-0) earned his league-leading fifth win. Tyler Jandron (1-4) took the loss.

Evansville will continue their six-game homestand with a Thursday rubber match against the Slammers on a Jacob’s Village Fireworks Night. First pitch in that game will be at 6:35 p.m.

COVID-19 Crisis Response Fund Announces 18th Round of Allocations

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 Evansville, IN –The COVID-19 Crisis Response Fund of the Greater Evansville Region has awarded an eighteenth round of allocations, granting nearly $600,000 to nine of the twelve nonprofit applicants. In total, the Response Fund has awarded 171 grants to 110 nonprofits, amounting to $4.9 million in relief, recovery, and restoration needs related to the pandemic. 

As part of round eighteen, Easterseals was awarded $150,000 to support their Pediatric Psychology Services which addresses mental health needs for children in our community. Through this program, Easterseals provides training for students in the final year of their doctorate of psychology. The PhD Level Psychology Internship was created due to the lack of psychologists locally and nationwide. 

In addition, both the Junior League of Evansville and ECHO Housing Corporation were awarded $100,000 each. Junior League will utilize the funds to purchase a mobile food truck to aid in the delivery of free food to the Promise Zone and other neighborhoods lacking access to nutritious food, along with starting a discounted purchase program for fresh food and other staple items. ECHO’s grant will cover an increase in building material costs and will enable the organization to build additional units – 27 rather than 25 – on the Promise Home, a new housing unit for chronically homeless individuals. 

Applications for funding relief, recovery, and restoration efforts will be accepted until August 17th at www.covidresponsefund.com. The final disbursements from the Fund will be made on September 1, 2021. 

Eighteenth Round Funding Recipients: 

Organization: Ark Crisis Children’s Center – Evansville, IN 

Awarded $40,000 

Organization: Cancer Pathways Midwest – Evansville, IN 

Awarded $64,000 

Organization: Easterseals Rehabilitation Center – Evansville, IN 

Awarded $150,000 2 

Organization: ECHO Housing Corporation – Evansville, IN 

Awarded $100,000 

Organization: Friends of Warrick County CASA, Inc. – Boonville, IN 

Awarded $33,000 

Organization: Junior League of Evansville – Evansville, IN 

Awarded $100,000 

Organization: Memorial Community Development Corporation – Evansville, IN 

Awarded $25,000 

Organization: Ozanam Family Shelter Corp – Evansville, IN 

Awarded $60,000 

Organization: Voices, Inc. – Evansville, IN 

Awarded $19,109 

HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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STACEY McNEILL NAMED INTERIM GENERAL MANAGER OF TROPICANA-EVANSVILLE

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STACEY McNEILL NAMED INTERIM GENERAL MANAGER OF TROPICANA-EVANSVILLE

The City–County Observer has just learned from reliable sources that the extremely popular  and current Executive Director of Marketing at Tropicana-Evansville, Stacey McNeill has just been named the Interim General Manager Of Tropicana-Evansville. Stacey will replace current General Manager John Chaszar who is retiring on July, 15, 2021.
Stacey is currently employed as a Director Of Marketing.  She has held a leadership position  ever since casino gaming came to Evansville. We are told that the rank and file employees of Tropicana-Evansville are extremely excited to hear that Stacey is the newly appointed Interim General Manager Of Tropicana-Evansville. In fact, we are told that this is the first time a female has been appointed to a General Manager position since Casino gaming has been approved in Evansville.

Stacey is known as a high energy professional who enjoys challenges of Casino Marketing which include strategic planning, direct marketing, database segmentation and analysis, managed revenue initiatives, players club program initiatives, advertising and public relations, special events and promotions, motorcoach and convention services, and community relations.

Recently it was announced that Bally Gaming became the the new owners of Tropicana -Evansville.

This is a developing story.

Commentary: The GOP And The Pied Piper’s Tune

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Commentary: The GOP And The Pied Piper’s Tune

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—Maybe, just maybe, some day the fever will break, and Republicans will realize Donald Trump has led them to nowhere but disaster.

Sadly, that day does not seem to be here yet.

The GOP seems determined to emulate the children who, lulled by the supposed magic of his playing, followed the Pied Piper into the river and their deaths. They cannot break the spell.

Trump already has cost Republicans so much.

Four years ago, they controlled the White House, the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of Representatives and, thanks to chicanery of then Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, the U.S. Supreme Court.

Now, they control only the Supreme Court and the pressure on Democrats from the most activist parts of their base mounts to adopt hardball low-ethics tactics like McConnell’s and pack the high bench.

All these setbacks can be laid at Trump’s door.

He lost a presidential election—and, make no mistake about it, he did lose—by more than 7 million votes and turned red states purple and purple states blue even though he presided over a robust economy. No other incumbent president running for reelection has managed to do that.

Normally, national disasters such as the coronavirus pandemic are political boons for incumbents. Such crises give presidents the chance to rally the nation, to pull people together and to make even the most reasoned political opposition seem like unpatriotic disloyalty. Trump squandered that opportunity, too.

Then he spent months pouting and conjuring up fantasies in which he actually had won in 2020. That cost the GOP the two Senate seats up for grabs—and thus control of the U.S. Senate.

Prior to that disaster, his undisciplined first two years—when he behaved with all the restraint of a hyperkinetic toddler hooked on crack—lost Republicans the House and made Nancy Pelosi, D-California, speaker.

Nor have the hits slowed since Trump lost the White House and the Senate.

On Jan. 6, he encouraged a mob to storm the Capitol. Members of the Senate and the House had to flee for their lives and at least five people died while Trump watched the debacle on television and did nothing. At best, his conduct constituted an abdication of duty. At worst, it involved aiding and abetting insurrection.

When Congress contemplated investigating the origins and causes of the Jan. 6 insurrection, Republican leaders in the House and Senate did yeoman work. They negotiated a deal that would have created an investigatory committee with an equal number of Republicans and Democrats on it, equal staffing by the parties, the same powers of subpoena and a guarantee to wrap up the investigation by the end of 2021, so it wouldn’t bleed over into next year’s elections.

Trump threatened to throw another temper tantrum if Republicans went along with the inquiry, even under such favorable terms. So, the GOP did an about-face and rejected the deal.

Now, Republicans face an investigation in which they cannot control what witnesses are called, what questions are asked or even when the whole process will wrap up.

The GOP has been reduced to complaining that the process will be partisan.

The Democrats’ rejoinder is obvious—if it is partisan, that’s because Republicans and their pouting former president chose to make it so.

Even as that political disaster for the GOP rolls out, another is waiting in the wings.

Trump’s business has been indicted on criminal charges. So has his longtime chief financial officer. The speculation has been that prosecutors are putting pressure on the CFO to “flip,” but it appears they may not need the Trump cohort to make their case. The records released so far demonstrate that Trump executives engaged in a widespread attempt to evade paying taxes that involved criminally fraudulent practices.

Thus far, Trump has not been charged personally, but the whole thing has the feel of a net tightening.

Worse for the GOP, the prosecutors are moving with deliberate speed and may be timing the worst and most damaging revelations to land during next year’s election season.

That will put Republicans, once again, in the untenable position of defending the indefensible.

Maybe they will figure out what’s happening to them before then.

Then again, maybe not.

The piper continues to play, and the tune makes the river look so inviting.

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 City-County Observer posted this article without bias on editing.

USI Volleyball Adds DI Transfer O’Neill To 2021 Roster

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University of Southern Indiana Volleyball Coach Randi Raff announced that 6-foot-1 middle blocker Lauren O’Neill (Covington, Indiana) is transferring from NCAA Division I University of Tennessee at Martin to join the Screaming Eagles for the 2021 season.

O’Neil, who will have four years of eligibility to compete for USI, played in 34 sets and 12 matches as a freshman in 2020-21, cracking the starting lineup seven times during the COVID-19 altered season. She finished the year with 34 kills, a .126 attacking percentage and 16 blocks.

Prior to UTM, O’Neill graduated from Covington Community High School where she racked up 730 kills, a .367 attacking percentage and 219 blocks in 388 set during her varsity career. She had 321 kills (3.5 per set) to go along with 88 blocks (1.0 per set) and 21 service aces as a senior in 2019.

For her efforts, O’Neill was named first-team IHSAA Class A All-State, All-Area and All-District as a senior.

During her junior year in 2018, O’Neill had 206 kills, a .367 attacking percentage and 50 blocks, helping CCHS to 27 wins.

“We are excited to welcome Lauren to our squad this fall and back to her home state of Indiana,” Raff said. “Lauren offers us depth and size at the middle position. She is a well-rounded student-athlete who will be an excellent representative of USI Volleyball on and off the court.”

O’Neill joins a list of newcomers that includes 5-foot-9 defensive specialist Anna Ballengee (Montgomery, Indiana), 5-foot-9 middle hitter Paris Downing (Avon, Indiana), 6-foot right side/outside hitter Evie Duncan (Evansville, Indiana), and 5-foot-10 setter Carly Sobieralski (Indianapolis, Indiana).

USI returns nine players and all seven starters from a team that won the Great Lakes Valley Conference Tournament title last season. USI was 17-4 overall, 14-4 in GLVC play, and finished the year ranked No. 15 in the final AVCA Top 25 Coaches’ Poll.

The 2020-21 season marked the first time in program history that USI earned a spot in the AVCA Top 25 as the Eagles were ranked as high as No. 12 midway through the season. The Eagles also earned their first-ever win over a nationally No. 1-ranked team when they upset top-ranked Lewis University on the road to finish the regular season.

USI begins the 2021 regular-season begins September 3-4 when the Eagles travel to Pensacola, Florida, to take part in the University of West Florida Invitational. The Eagles host the USI Invitational September 10-11 at Screaming Eagles Arena to open their regular-season home schedule.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Evansville, IN – Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office:

James Robert Bushrod Jr.

  Count 1 – HC – Operating a Motor Vehicle After Forfeiture of License for Life : 5F : Pending

William David Timson

Count 1 – HC – Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator : 6F : Pending
  Count 2 – HC – Possession of Methamphetamine : 6F : Pending

Jerry Lee Hall

Count 1 – Resisting Law Enforcement : 6F : Pending
  Count 2 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 6F : Pending
  Count 3 – Possession of Cocaine : 6F : Pending
  Count 4 – Possession of Marijuana : BM : Pending
  Count 5 – Possession of Paraphernalia : CM : Pending

Brandon Michael Melton

Count 1 – Domestic Battery : 6F : Pending
  Count 2 – Neglect of a Dependent : 6F : Pending

Mary Heather Faith

Count 1 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 6F : Pending
  Count 2 – Unlawful Possession of Syringe : 6F : Pending
  Count 3 – Possession of Paraphernalia : CM : Pending

Alisha Marie Strader

  Count 1 – Carrying a Handgun Without a License : 5F : Pending
  Count 2 – Criminal Recklessness : 6F : Pending
  Count 3 – Auto Theft : 6F : Pending

Kenneth Wilburn Coburn

Count 1 – Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .15 or More : 6F : Pending
  Count 2 – Neglect of a Dependent : 6F : Pending
  Count 3 – Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated Endangering a Person With a Passenger Less Than 18 Years of Age : 6F : Pending

Charlie T. Ross Jr.

Count 1 – Failure to Register as a Sex or Violent Offender : 6F : Pending

Melissa Kay Poe

Count 1 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 6F : Pending

Tabitha L. Seabeck

Count 1 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 5F : Pending
  Count 2 – Possession of Paraphernalia : AM : Pending

Austin Eric Nieten

  Count 1 – Burglary : 4F : Pending
  Count 2 – Stalking : 6F : Pending
  Count 3 – Theft : AM : Pending
  Count 4 – Possession of Marijuana : AM : Pending
  Count 5 – Criminal Mischief : BM : Pending

Nijel T. Ervin

  Count 1 – Domestic Battery : 6F : Pending
  Count 2 – Resisting Law Enforcement : AM : Pending
  Count 3 – (Attempt) Resisting Law Enforcement : AM : Pending
  Count 4 – Public Intoxication : BM : Pending

Gabrielle Luvcher Pruitt

  Count 1 – Domestic Battery : 6F : Pending

Christian Cody Dimmett

Count 1 – Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .15 or More : 6F : Pending

Antonio Lamont Taylor

Count 1 – HC – Possession of Methamphetamine : 6F : Pending

Jacquelyn Jo Shell

  Count 1 – Battery Resulting in Moderate Bodily Injury : 6F : Pending
  Count 2 – Criminal Trespass : AM : Pending

Attorney General Todd Rokita sues Google again over alleged unlawful monopolistic practices

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Attorney General Todd Rokita has filed a multistate lawsuit against Google over monopolistic practices used by the digital giant to thwart competition and maintain unfair control over markets for Android app distribution and Android in-app payment processing.

An investigation joined by 37 state attorneys general revealed that Google is abusing its market control in the digital economy through Google Play, an app store that comes pre-installed on nearly every Android device. Through contractual restraints, technical barriers and deception, Google inhibits competition by obstructing reasonable alternative means of downloading apps.

Google then requires in-app purchases to be made using its own payment processing services, for which it charges inflated fees — to the tune of 30% — that it could not sustain but for the fact that it has foreclosed competition from alternative app distribution and payment methods.

“This is yet another example of a Big Tech company harming Hoosiers through unfair practices,” Attorney General Rokita said. “All businesses certainly have the right to seek strategic advantages and maximize their own profits, but in pursuing these goals they must also comply with antitrust laws and consumer protection statutes. Competition is an important part of our economy that protects consumers.”

The complaint alleges that Google has unlawfully restrained trade and maintained monopolies in the markets for Android app distribution and payment processing services for Android in-app digital purchases.

Google’s alleged unlawful conduct artificially limited the availability of feasible alternatives that might otherwise place competitive pressure on Google to offer lower fees, enhance quality or innovate new features — and consumers are ultimately harmed by these tactics.

Indiana is joined in this lawsuit by the attorneys general of Alaska, Arkansas, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and West Virginia.

Citing federal and state antitrust and consumer protection statutes, the lawsuit seeks broad injunctive relief sufficient to forbid the repetition of Google’s unlawful practices and to restore competition. The lawsuit also aims to obtain redress for consumers.

This lawsuit is just the latest action that Attorney General Rokita has taken to stop Big Tech companies’ heavy-handed and abusive conduct against Hoosiers.

In April, Attorney General Rokita launched an investigation into the censorship practices of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google and Twitter. That investigation is still ongoing.

Attorney General Rokita also represents Indiana in two other multistate antitrust lawsuits against Google and another multistate antitrust lawsuit against Facebook.

In October, Indiana joined the U.S. Department of Justice and 10 other state attorneys general in a lawsuit against Google claiming that the company unlawfully maintains monopolies in markets for general search services and search advertising.

In December, Indiana joined the Texas Attorney General’s Office and eight other state attorneys general asserting that Google has committed antitrust violations through its display advertising practices.

Also in December, Indiana joined 47 state and territorial attorneys general in a lawsuit claiming that Facebook unlawfully acquired Instagram and WhatsApp and that it unlawfully maintained its monopoly power in the market for personal social networking services.

This week’s lawsuit against Google is attached.