Join the Southwestern Indiana Historical Society for a special evening as Tom Lonnberg and Savannah Summerfield present Evansville Then and Now on Tuesday, May 20 at 6:30 PM in the Browning Gallery at Willard Library.
This engaging program takes a closer look at the evolution of our city—how it’s changed, what’s endured, and what stories the past still tells.
No RSVP required—just bring your curiosity!
For more info, contact SWIHS at swihs1920@gmail.com
FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – May 16, 2025 – CenterPoint Energy is actively monitoring severe weather forecasts and preparing for any potential impacts of strong storms expected to move through southwestern Indiana today. The company is coordinating with emergency and agency partners and mobilizing resources across its service area to be prepared to respond to impacts and outages.
“We are closely monitoring the forecast and have taken steps to position crews, equipment and support teams across our service territory. We have a plan and we are executing our plan,” said Shane Bradford, CenterPoint’s Vice President, Indiana Electric. “Our teams are prepared to respond, if needed, and will work safely and efficiently to restore service once conditions allow.”
Actions CenterPoint is Taking to Prepare
The actions CenterPoint is taking to prepare and respond include:
· Pre-staging crews and equipment: CenterPoint crews and equipment are positioned across our service area to quickly respond to potential storm impacts once conditions have cleared.
· Coordinating with government officials: Providing regular updates to state, county and city officials about our pre-storm activities and readiness posture.
· Sharing information and updates:Providing safety and preparedness information directly with customers via email, phone or text, across social media platforms and other channels to keep customers informed and prepared.
· Organizing additional call center staffing: Securing additional call center staff to handle a higher volume of calls during the storm and limit wait times.
Responding to Potential Impacts Across Service Territory
Across its Indiana Electric service area, CenterPoint is carefully monitoring severe weather and preparing to deploy frontline crews to efficiently clear storm debris, repair the grid and restore service to impacted customers as quickly and safely as possible.
Important Information for Electric Customers
CenterPoint electric customers are encouraged to enroll in the company’s Power Alert Service® to receive outage details, estimated restoration times and customer-specific restoration updates via phone call, text or email. Customers can also stay up-to-date on outages with CenterPoint’s new and improved, cloud-based Outage Tracker, now available in English and Spanish, which allows customers to see outages by county and zip code. The new tracker is capable of handling increased traffic during storms and is ADA- and mobile-friendly.
CenterPoint Encourages All Customers to Have a Plan to Stay Safe
Defendant with history of drug abuse violated court order barring her from being alone with newborn
A 29-year-old Evansville woman with a drug-abuse history who rolled over in bed atop her infant son, asphyxiating him to death, will remain behind bars following successful arguments by Attorney General Todd Rokita’s appeals team to uphold her conviction on neglect charges.
At the time of the tragic incident on June 8, 2022, Taylor Smith was in violation of a court order forbidding her to be alone with the 12-day-old child. She also rejected the advice of child welfare officials that she refrain from co-sleeping with the child, especially when under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
Smith is serving a 30-year prison sentence on the neglect and drugs charges.
“Because of this woman’s fateful decisions, a precious newborn child lost his life,” Attorney General Rokita said. “I’m proud of our team for ensuring she is held to account for her actions, and we can only hope that stories like this one will deter other parents and would-be parents from similar missteps.”
The child’s father also pleaded guilty to neglect charges.
Attorney General Rokita thanked Deputy Attorney General Tyler Banks for his work on this case. He also thanked Appeals Division Chief Counsel Angela Sanchez and Criminal Appeals Section Chief Andrew Kobe.
Evansville, Ind. – The Evansville Otters (3-3) hit four home runs en route to a 18-13 win over the Trois-Rivieres Aigles (2-5) to win their first series of the year.
Evansville got an electric start from Parker Brahms, going six innings, giving up three runs and striking out eight without conceding a single walk.
On the offensive side, the Otters jumped out right away. RBIs from four separate Otters gave them a 4-1 lead after one, then a two-run bomb from David Mendham in the second gave the Otters a seven run lead.
A Keenan Taylor two-run home run extended the lead to 9-1 and Evansville wouldn’t look back.
The Otters added two more on Cohen Wilbanks and Alain Camou RBI singles in the 5th. Runs in each of the sixth and seventh brought the score to 13-7.
Evansville entered the bottom of the 8th with a 13-10 cushion and added even more insurance. Ray Gil blasted a two-run home run of his own before Graham Brown would follow suit with a three-run home run to help the Otters enter the ninth with an eight-run lead.
Zach Voelker, who was activated from the injured list today, made his season debut and closed out the ninth, with the Otters victorious, 18-13.
Evansville hit four home runs on the night and all nine Otters registered hits – eight of them also grabbing at least one RBI.
The Purple Aces outhit the Braves through nine innings
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – To begin the final series of the regular season the University of Evansville gave up a big inning to the Bradley Braves to fall 9-4.
A big top of the sixth for Bradley sunk the Purple Aces in their first game of the weekend. Despite consistent hitting for UE throughout the game, Evansville left too many runners stranded to get runs across home plate. The Aces left 15 on base for the first time in two seasons on Thursday night. UE’s offense was led by outfielder Ty Rumsey (Evansville, Ind. / North HS) and catcher Matt Flaherty (Lake Zurich, Ill. / Bellarmine) with three hits each. Four separate Evansville batters drove in runs in the loss.
“We couldn’t get the big hit with runners in scoring position tonight as we left 15 runners on,” said Head Coach Wes Carroll after the loss. “Our back is against the wall now. We understand the situation and will show some fight behind [Kevin] Reed tomorrow.”
The teams traded blows early as Bradley struck first with only two hits in the top of the first. It took as much time for the Aces to score their first run with singles from lead-off man Charlie Longmeier (Seymour, Ind. / Seymour HS), right fielder Harrison Taubert (Casper, Wyo. / Northeast CC), and center fielder Ty Rumsey (Evansville, Ind. / North HS). UE was able to double its score as catcher Matt Flaherty (Lake Zurich, Ill. / Bellarmine) beat out a double play ball to bring Taubert home.
The Braves were able to tie the game up to begin the second with a solo home run. After the second inning, the offenses were quiet as it became mostly a defensive game. Evansville’s defense had an impressive top of the fourth after giving up two early hits. Third baseman Drew Howard (Ferdinand, Ind. / Forest Park HS) had a diving lineout to get the first out. The Aces then turned a double play from starting pitcher Kenton Deverman, who turned a popup into a second out at first base.
UE added at least a hit every inning going into the fifth, when they were able to break the tie. Rumsey led off the inning with a ground-rule double to right center. He scored three at-bats later when designated hitter Brodie Peart (Markham, Ontario) put a knock into right center, making it a 3-2 game. But Evansville’s lead didn’t last for long as the Bradley offense came alive in the top of the sixth with four hits, scoring five runs.
The Aces got one back in the bottom of the sixth as a lead-off walk to Longmeier became a run on an RBI single from Rumsey. UE’s offense had another opportunity in the bottom of the seventh after blanking the Braves in the top frame. Evansville loaded the bases on two walks and a single. But second baseman Cal McGinnis (Kimberly, Wis. / Bradley) hit straight to the pitcher for a 1-2-3 double play, ending the inning.
Bradley added two more runs in the top of the eighth with two hits and a walk. The Aces added two more hits in the bottom of the frame with two outs on the board. Both runners were left stranded for UE’s last opportunity on the base paths. Evansville was struck out the side in the bottom of the ninth for the 9-4 final score.
The Aces will need to win the final two games of the regular season to make the MVC Tournament. UE will get its chance tomorrow afternoon at 12 p.m. from Charles H. Braun Stadium.
ST. CHARLES, Mo. – University of Southern Indiana Baseball lost the opener at Lindenwood University, 9-4, Thursday evening in St. Charles, Missouri. USI is 25-28 overall and 13-12 in the OVC, while Lindenwood goes to 27-26, 14-10 OVC. With the loss, USI falls to sixth in the OVC standings. The Screaming Eagles move to a game behind the Lions, who are fourth, and a half game behind Southeast Missouri State University, which was leading the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, 11-0, at press time. The Screaming Eagles spotted the Lions a 5-0 lead through the first two innings. Lindenwood got a tally in the first and four in the second for the 5-0 lead, scoring all of its runs off USI starting left-hander Jake Porter. USI started cutting the deficit in the fourth inning on an RBI-single by junior leftfielder Hunter Miller, scoring sophomore rightfielderCameron Boyd. Boyd had singled to start the inning and extended his hitting streak to a team-best 18 games. Miller would come across the plate with USI’s second run of the game on an RBI ground out by sophomore second baseman Anthony Umbach to make the score 5-2. The Eagles closed the gap to one, 5-4, with another pair of runs in the top of the sixth. Miller scored for the second time in the game, crossing the plate on a sac fly by Umbach, while junior catcher Micajah Wallmarked USI’s fourth tally on a single by junior shortstop Clayton Slack. The Lions re-extended the margin to three runs, 7-4, with a two-run blast in the bottom of the seventh. Lindenwood would add two more runs in the eighth for the 9-4 final. Offensively, USI was led by Slack and Holiday with three hits each, while Miller scored twice and Umbach had a pair of RBIs. Porter (4-5) started and took the loss for the Eagles on the mound. The junior left-hander allowed five runs on seven hits and two walks, while striking out two in three frames of work. USI got a strong outing from freshman right-hander Colin Wolfe out of the bullpen. Wolfe blanked the Lions for three innings on two hits, striking out three.
Beckwith slammed for allegation that Democrats pay for Black voter turnout
By Sydney Byerly, The Indiana Citizen
Indiana Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith speaking in his new office in the Indiana Statehouse in January.Photo by Schyler Altherr, TheStatehouseFile.com.
Amid the ongoing controversy over his social media post about the Three-Fifths Compromise that garnered national attention and a strong backlash, Indiana Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith has made new, unfounded accusations, alleging that the Marion County Democratic Party has been paying inner-city pastors for votes.
Beckwith was speaking with WIBC on May 1, telling them he thinks some of the faith leaders who spoke out against him are preaching “racist division,” in part because he alleges the Democratic Party in Indianapolis is paying churches to turn out voters for them.
“That’s actually happening right now. I have proof of it. There have been pastors that have told me, inner-city Black pastors that told me the Democrat Party will pay them thousands of dollars if they just get Black voters to the polls,” Beckwith said in the radio interview. “So, these guys are not pushing through authentic faith. They’re pushing politics, and they’re using faith as a mechanism to do that.”
The Indiana Citizen reached out to the lieutenant governor multiple times to ask him to provide proof of his allegations, but Beckwith did not respond. Republican leadership in the Indiana General Assembly, along with Gov. Mike Braun’s office, also did not reply to requests for comment.
Pastor David Greene of Purpose of Life Ministries, president of the Concerned Clergy of Indianapolis, told The Indiana Citizen that Beckwith is “grasping at straws” to make himself look better after receiving backlash for his recent comments about the Three-Fifths Compromise.
The Concerned Clergy of Indianapolis and other faith leaders along with Democratic legislators held a news conference May 2 to called on Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith for apologize for his comments on the Three-Fifths Compromise.Photo by Sydney Byerly, TheStatehouseFile.com.
“That is totally false. I mean, I don’t know where he gets that from, and I know he implied that urban pastors told him that and I’d like to know who that was, because that’s totally not true. Actually, the Democratic Party doesn’t have a ton of money, so they’ve not even been able to do anything like that. They aren’t paying anybody,” Greene said.
The Indiana Democratic Party also denied the allegation. “The lieutenant governor’s accusations are categorically false,” Sam Barloga, a party spokesman, said in an email. “How does a public official get away with telling such blatant lies? He should be impeached and (kept) far away from any elected office in Indiana.”
The Indiana House Democratic caucus responded to a request for comment by forwarding the April 29 statement made by Rep. Cherrish Pryor, D-Indianapolis. Speaking about the lieutenant governor’s Three-Fifths Compromise comments, the state lawmaker highlighted the work of inner-city faith leaders, calling them “true public servants” who serve the poor and help to raise the next generation of “God-fearing leaders” in Indiana.
“I pray that Lt. Gov. Beckwith will move to focus on making life better for Hoosiers, not dividing us,” Pryor said in her statement. “While this topic brings with it the weight of hundreds of years of oppression and suffering for Black Americans, I ask for us all to do the difficult thing and pray for those who embrace racism, ignorance, greed and power. It must be difficult to live with that much hate in your heart.”
Beckwith, a pastor at Life Church in Noblesville, ignited the dispute last month when he filmed and posted a short video about the Three-Fifths Compromise to his X account. The constitutional provision adopted in 1787 that counted slaves as three-fifths of a person was brought up by a Democratic legislator during the debate in the Indiana Senate over Senate Enrolled Act 289, which bans from state government all diversity, equity and inclusion programs and initiatives. In his social-media video, the lieutenant governor claimed the Compromise was a “great move by the North to make sure that slavery would be eradicated in our nation.”
Historians say the Three-Fifths Compromise actually did just the opposite. They say it gave the Southern states more power in Congress, which they used to grow slavery in the United States.
Indiana Gov. Mike Braun has said he did not like Beckwith’s comments and that he “definitely wouldn’t have used that characterization.” Lawmakers, along with faith-based and religious groups such as the Concerned Clergy of Indianapolis, the Baptist Ministers Alliance and the Indiana chapter of the National Action Network, have spoken out against Beckwith and his comments.
Moreover, the Concerned Clergy and its religious organization partners have collected more than 1,000 signatures on a petition demanding that Beckwith apologize for his remarks on the Three-Fifths Compromise and calling on Braun to denounce the lieutenant governor’s comments. As of May 9, the petition has not been submitted to Braun.
In the WIBC radio interview May 1, Beckwith said he was not surprised by the pushback nor the comments from Braun when the governor told the press, “I definitely wouldn’t have used that characterization, and I don’t like it,” because, the lieutenant governor said, no one likes to hear the tough truths.
“I don’t work for Gov. Braun. I work for the people of Indiana,” Beckwith said. “And they’re so fed up with this woke-mind virus that has been taking over their children and children’s children for the last 50 years, through CRT and through DEI and nonsense like that.”
He added that there’s a cancer he calls “woke-ism” plaguing America, and he’s doing his part to address it.
“We’ve got to address it, and so that’s what I did with my video, and I’m glad I did it,” the lieutenant governor told WIBC. “And again, that’s what leaders do. Leaders lead … whether people like it or not.”
The clergy group’s statement reads: “If Lt. Governor Beckwith truly ‘works for the people,’ then he must start by respecting the full humanity of all people, especially those whose ancestors bore the weight of America’s original sin. His refusal to retract these comments is not just disappointing, it is disqualifying. It reveals a fundamental lack of understanding about the pain, legacy, and resilience of Black communities in Indiana and across this nation.”
The Concerned Clergy also directly called on Braun to renounce Beckwith’s statements about the Three-Fifths Compromise. Greene said they would be watching to see what the governor decides to do and added that “anything less (than a full denouncement) is complicity. Anything less is an endorsement of ignorance over integrity.”
“We issued a statement, challenging the governor to come out and renounce the words of the lieutenant governor. If he doesn’t believe that the lieutenant governor is right concerning historical facts, then he would say so,” Greene said. “And if he doesn’t (rebuke him), then one must conclude that he believes what Lieutenant Governor Beckwith is saying is factual and true.”
The clergy group’s statement concludes with the bold-faced lines, “We are not three-fifths. We are whole. We are worthy. We are watching.”
Greene said he’s not anticipating any response from the governor because there has been no effort to communicate with him or the faith coalition about Beckwith’s comments.
Greene also said Beckwith’s comments about the Three-Fifths Compromise are not a partisan issue, although the lieutenant governor is trying to make it one.
“This is an issue around his version of rewriting the facts. and then he’s trying to spin it as though it’s some lefty Democrats or whatever attacking him and he’s the victim,” the Indianapolis pastor said. “When, in reality, he’s attacking Black people and attacking history, minimizing the pain and suffering that Black people have gone through as a part of slavery, et cetera.”
FOTNOTE: This article was published by TheStatehouseFile.com through a partnership with The Indiana Citizen, a nonpartisan, nonprofit platform dedicated to increasing the number of informed, engaged Hoosier citizens.
Sydney Byerly is a political reporter who grew up in New Albany. Before joining The Citizen, Sydney reported news for TheStatehouseFile.com and most recently managed and edited The Corydon Democrat & Clarion News in southern Indiana. She earned her bachelor’s in journalism at Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism.