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Awards voted on by UE coaches and staff
Two of the most prestigious awards given annually by the University of Evansville Athletic Department have been announced as Phil Dzienciol was named the recipient of the Ralph H. Coleman Award and Rachel Tam earned the Lois D. Patton Award.
Both awards are given to the top senior male and female student-athlete at UE each season. The award is based 50% on academic achievement, 25% athletic success and 25% service to the community. Purple Aces coaches and staff vote for the recipients.
Competing on the UE cross country and track and field teams, Phil Dzienciol exemplified what a true Ace is on the course and in the classroom. The Actuarial Science major recorded a 3.86 GPA. After serving as an actuarial intern with Blue Cross and Blue Shield in Chicago in the summer of 2019, Dzienciol used the experience to begin his career in Louisville as an Actuarial Consulting Analyst following graduation.
Dzienciol was active in the community, assisting with timing of local track meets while volunteering time at Angel Mounds for high school and middle school cross country meets. He also helped in the setup of the Veteran’s Day Parade on Franklin Street in Evansville. Dzienciol was a consistent top five runner on the cross country squad, improving each season while posting his 8K PR of 27:31 at the Fast Cats Classic last fall. On the track side, he led the team with the fastest 800M time at the Missouri Valley Conference Indoor Championship.
“It takes special character to be a student-athlete. A student-athlete has to be academically, community service, service to others, among other things. One of the biggest things is that it takes time,†Aces head cross country and track and field coach Don Walters exclaimed. “Philip checks all of the boxes. He does an outstanding job – and more. I am so proud to know and coach Philip; I am proud of him for earning the Ralph H. Coleman Award as the top senior student-athlete at UE.â€
One of the top players in Aces volleyball history – Rachel Tam led by an example in all facets of her career. The Hong Kong native finished her academic career with a 3.80 GPA while earning a degree in Exercise Science. She was rewarded with a spot on the MVC Scholar-Athlete First Team as a junior and senior. Tam graduated Magna Cum Laude and earned Dean’s List recognition in each of her final five semesters. She volunteered time with several local organizations including the Evansville United Volleyball Academy.
Tam wrapped up her UE career with 1,469 kills, a tally that puts her third in the record books. On September 17, 2019, Tam recorded 39 kills in a victory over Tennessee Tech inside Meeks Family Fieldhouse. It was the best performance in program history while ranking second all-time in the conference record books, just one behind the top mark. She capped off her career with a spot on the 2019 MVC All-Tournament Team.
“Rachel Tam came to UE and changed our whole program; she was our leader on and off the court. Without saying a word, she led our team by being the first one in the gym and the last one to leave,†UE head volleyball coach Fernando Morales said. “She worked hard on and off the court. As player, her numbers speak for themselves, but she was so much more than that, she was our leader, our energy and pushed the girls around her to be better. I am proud of her for winning this award.â€
Evansville, IN – Victory Theatre is excited to announce that the genre bending band Whiskey Myers will be hitting the stage on Aug 23rd. Whiskey Myers has played more than 2,000 live shows since their emergence in 2007 and has sold out 95% of their headlining shows over the past two years to ever-increasing crowds.
New self-produced album WHISKEY MYERS, out now on the band’s own Wiggy Thump Records, debuted atop the Country and Americana/Folk sales charts, at No. 2 on the Rock chart and No. 6 on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart. The self-titled project follows their most recent album, Mud, which reached No. 1 on the iTunes country chart with single “Stone†hitting Top 10 all genre. USA Today describes the band led by frontman Cody Cannon as “a riff-heavy blend of Southern rock and gritty country that has earned comparisons to the Allman Brothers Band and Led Zeppelin,†with Rolling Stone noting “it’s the seminal combination of twang and crunchy rock & roll guitars that hits a perfect sweet spot.†The band has also earned sync success with features in Seasons 1 & 2 of Paramount Network’s Kevin Costner hit show “Yellowstone†as well as the Renée Zellweger-led Netflix series “What/If.†As Esquire proclaims, “Whiskey Myers are the real damn deal.â€
Tickets go on sale May 15 at 10 am at Ticketmaster.com. Tickets are $29, $35, $46, and $80.00.
Editor’s note: This article has been updated.
Finding Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill guilty of misdemeanor battery and two related violations of the Indiana Rules of Professional Conduct, the Indiana Supreme Court has ordered him to serve a 30-day suspension.
Hill, a Republican, will begin his suspension May 18 and will be automatically reinstated at the end of the 30-day period, provided no other suspensions are in effect. The discipline was handed down Monday in a per curiam opinion in In the Matter of Curtis T. Hill, Jr., 19S-DI-156.
It’s unclear what the one-month suspension will mean for Hill’s ability to remain in office, or for the running of the Office of the Attorney General. The OAG did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The justices found that Hill violated Rule 8.4(b), committing a criminal act reflecting adversely on his honesty, trustworthiness or fitness as a lawyer, and Rule 8.4(d), engaging in conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice. However, like hearing officer Myra Selby, the court found in Hill’s favor on an alleged violation of Admission and Discipline Rule 22, the Indiana Oath of Attorneys.
The violations stem from March 2018, when four women accused Hill of drunkenly groping them at an early-morning bar party. The women are identified by their initials in the discipline order, but all four have spoken publicly about the incident: Democratic State Rep. Mara Candelaria Reardon and legislative staffers Gabrielle McLemore Brock, Niki DaSilva and Samantha Lozano.
The allegations against Hill became public in July 2018, when a memorandum about the incident prepared by the Taft law firm in Indianapolis surfaced. Since then, Hill has adamantly denied the allegations against him, and a special prosecutor declined to bring criminal charges.
But the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission in March 2019 brought discipline charges against the AG, and the matter went before Selby, a former Indiana Supreme Court justice, during a four-day evidentiary hearing in October. The commission had sought a two-year suspension without automatic reinstatement, while Selby recommended a 60-day suspension without automatic reinstatement.Â
In handing down the discipline against Hill, the high court initially addressed the issue of whether Hill’s acts at the March 2018 party were criminal.
Hill claimed he touched the women, and other partygoers, only in a manner that’s to be expected during a crowded social event. He likened this physical contact to the kind he makes when working political events.
But finding “ample evidence†that the contact was rude and insolent — two factors necessary to establish battery — the Supreme Court credited Selby’s determination that the physical contact constituted misdemeanor battery.
“At the end of the day, whether Respondent possessed the requisite mens rea was a question of fact to be determined by the hearing officer; and the long, lingering, and meandering touches described by the four women and others, the various reactions of those who experienced or observed those touches, and the numerous other accounts of Respondent’s conduct at the bar, all offer ample support for the hearing officer’s ultimate finding on this point,†the per curiam opinion says.
Specifically, Reardon has said Hill slid his hand down her bare back while she wore a backless dress, then squeezed her buttocks. Brock said he gave her a “sexual back rub†without her consent, while Lozano said he put his hands around her waist and pulled her close to him. For her part, DaSilva said Hill rubbed his hand down her back toward her buttocks, then grabbed her hand and placed both of their hands on her buttocks.
In a footnote, the justices referenced Hill’s emphasis on the fact that the special prosecutor declined to bring criminal charges against him for the groping. But noting that “a prosecutor may decline to pursue a prosecution for any number of reasons unrelated to whether the subject of the investigation committed a criminal act,†the court said “the special prosecutor’s declination of prosecution is of no moment to our analysis.â€
On the question of a violation of Rule 8.4(b), the justices said the issue was whether Hill’s act of misdemeanor battery had a nexus to his fitness to practice law. They looked to Matter of Oliver, 493 N.E.2d 1237 (Ind. 1986), and its progeny for guidance.
In arguing against any nexus, Hill said the party was a private, informal event not related to his duties as AG. But he also testified that his motivation for going to the party was to meet with Sen. Greg Taylor to discuss a bill related to the Office of the Attorney General.
“Respondent’s own testimony brings his criminal conduct directly within the ambit of the performance of his professional duties,†the court wrote. “Respondent went to the party with the purpose of discussing a bill affecting his office with key legislators and nurturing goodwill, he spent time at the party doing precisely these things, and while there he committed battery against a legislator and three legislative staffers.â€
Turning next to Rule 8.4(d), the justices rejected Hill’s argument that his role as attorney general should be viewed differently than that of a local prosecutor under Oliver because he does not directly charge crimes. They instead said he is the “chief legal officer of the State of Indiana.â€
“In short, the Attorney General is an ‘officer charged with the administration of the law’ at least to the same extent as a prosecutor, if not substantially more so. Accordingly, Respondent’s criminal conduct was prejudicial to the administration of justice, in violation of Rule 8.4(d).â€
The key issue related to the appropriate sanction for Hill’s misconduct was his response to the leaking of the Taft memo, which made the allegations against him public. Selby determined his response was “significantly aggravating in nature,†the justices wrote, thus making a suspension without automatic reinstatement appropriate.
The high court, however, disagreed on that point.
Specifically at issue were emails and press releases that Hill and a team of his staff and supporters put out in the wake of the memo’s leak. Determining the emails were properly admitted, the justices conceded the contents of the messages often “reflect(ed) extremely poorly on various members of Respondent’s team… .â€
In a footnote, the justices referenced several of the emails and press releases it deemed particularly inappropriate. Among them was a press release aimed at Niki DaSilva, who had mistakenly sent a draft of her public statement regarding her allegations to an Attorney General’s Office email address. Hill characterized DaSilva’s message, intended for a friend, as being “editorialized†and as evidence of coordination among the accusers.â€
The court also took issue with an email suggesting that those involved with the Taft report should be referred to as “Leakers and Liarsâ€; a rejected suggestion that the allegations against Hill be characterized as a “lynchingâ€; phony letters to the editor and editorials drafted by members of Hill’s team; and “hired consultants’ suggestion after the Commission filed its disciplinary complaint against Respondent to dig up the negative background on Commission members and then ‘shop portions of research enclosed no fingerprints to a national conservative outlet to generate a piece that friends would use with grassroots folks’ … .â€
But finding that Hill was not “personally responsible for every poor word choice or ill-conceived idea proposed by individual team members,†the court said certain actions taken by Hill and his team were aimed at the process that led to the public accusations, not the accusers.
“All involved in this process — the four women, Respondent, and legislative leaders — appropriately decried the unauthorized leaking of the Taft Report by a legislative staffer. Respondent’s public criticisms of that process are valid and do not speak to any negative characteristics relevant to sanction.â€
Further, the court said Hill was “fully entitled†to defend himself against the allegations, including by denying the allegations. But, the justices continued, he went “a step too far†in two respects.
First, he characterized the allegations as both false and “vicious†— the latter, according to the justices, implying malice or bad faith on the part of the accusers. Likewise, in the second incident, he implied malice or bad faith when he sent out a press release with DaSilva’s email, which “’ could serve only to intimidate [her] and anyone else thinking of stepping forward.’â€
“In sum, we find Respondent’s actions in the wake of the disclosure of the Taft Report do carry some aggravating weight, but not to an extent that entails the type of wholesale lack of insight or lack of remorse that ordinarily would prompt us to require a respondent-attorney to undergo the reinstatement process in order to prove his fitness to resume the practice of law,†the high court ruled. “… Although Respondent strayed past an appropriate line in some of his conduct after the Taft Report was leaked, he was apologetic in his initial discussions with legislative leaders before the leak, and in a press release after the leak Respondent maintained his innocence but simultaneously emphasized that ‘[v]ictims of sexual abuse and/or sexual harassment deserve to have their voices heard.’
“… The victims have suffered significant harm that, while certainly exacerbated by other events, was caused most proximately by Respondent’s misconduct,†the court concluded. “Respondent’s substantial experience in the practice of law, almost all of which has been spent in a prosecutorial capacity, counsels that he should have known better than to conduct himself at the bar in the manner he did; but that same experience, consisting of roughly three decades of public service without prior discipline, also carries mitigating weight.â€
The costs of the proceeding are assessed against Hill, and Selby was dismissed as hearing officer “with the Court’s appreciation.â€
In a footnote, the high court declined to revisit the issues of whether Hill committed sexual battery, a felony, against DaSilva and whether he violated the Oath of Attorneys. The commission referenced those issues in a footnote in response to Hill’s petition for Supreme Court review of Selby’s findings, but it did not further develop an argument on either.
The justices also offered harsh words for the attorneys representing both sides, saying they were “compelled to note our strong disapproval and extreme disappointment with respect to the tenor of the parties’ briefs in this case.â€
Hill was represented by Indianapolis attorneys Jim Voyles, Jennifer Lukemeyer, and Donald Lundberg, while the commission was represented by staff attorneys Seth Pruden and Angie Ordway.
“The Commission repeatedly refers to Respondent in hyperbolic terms of sexual predation, and the Commission — entirely without support — accuses Respondent of having committed perjury at the final hearing simply because the hearing officer, in endeavoring to reconcile all the testimony (including Respondent’s), found that Respondent’s conduct amounted to a battery,†the justices wrote. “Respondent for his part alternately describes the Commission using terms such as ‘imperialist,’ ‘coddling,’ ‘dismissive,’ and ‘arrogant,’ and Respondent devotes far too much of his briefing to entirely unfounded attacks on the Commission’s motive and integrity.
“There are many legitimate legal arguments to be made in this case, which makes the parties’ inappropriate ad hominem attacks on one another a particularly frustrating diversion. We expect counsel to behave better in future cases.â€
FOOTNOTE: Â For more on this story, see the May 13 edition of Indiana Lawyer.
The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today announced that 511 additional Hoosiers have been diagnosed with COVID-19 through testing at ISDH, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and private laboratories. That brings to 24,627 the total number of Indiana residents known to have the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s total.
Intensive care unit and ventilator capacity remains steady. Nearly 43 percent of ICU beds and more than 81 percent of ventilators were available as of Monday.
A total of 1,411 Hoosiers have been confirmed to have died of COVID-19, an increase of 32 over the previous day. Another 129 probable deaths have been reported based on clinical diagnoses in patients for whom no positive test is on record. Deaths are reported based on when data are received by ISDH and occurred over multiple days.
                                                      To date, 146,688 tests have been reported to ISDH, up from 140,029 on Sunday.
Marion County had the most new cases, at 178. Other counties with more than 10 new cases were Allen (19), Bartholomew (14), Elkhart (15), Hamilton (11), Hendricks (15), Howard (11), Johnson (19), Lake (58), Montgomery (12), Morgan (11), Porter (18), Shelby (11), St. Joseph (19) and Tippecanoe (11). The Lake County totals include results from East Chicago and Gary, which have their own health departments. A complete list of cases by county is posted at www.coronavirus.in.gov, which is updated daily at noon. Cases are listed by county of residence.
Hoosiers who have symptoms of COVID-19 and those who have been exposed and need a test to return to work are encouraged to visit a state-sponsored testing site, which can be found at the COVID-19 testing link at www.coronavirus.in.gov. Individuals without symptoms who are at high risk because they are over age 65, have diabetes, obesity, high blood pressure or another underlying condition, as well as those who are pregnant, live with a high-risk individual or are a member of a minority population that’s at greater risk for severe illness, also are encouraged to get tested.
Â
Gov. Eric J. Holcomb, the Indiana State Department of Health and other state leaders will host a virtual media briefing to provide updates on COVID-19 and its impact on Indiana.
WHO:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Gov. Holcomb
State Health Commissioner Kristina Box, M.D., FACOG
WHEN:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 2:30 p.m. ET, Monday, May 11
IS IT TRUE that a total of 1,379 Hoosiers have been confirmed to have died of COVID-19, an increase of 17 over the previous day? Â …that another 129 probable deaths have been reported based on clinical diagnoses in patients for whom no positive test is on record? … that death is reported based on when data are received by ISDH and occurred over multiple days?
IS IT TRUE that ISHD reported that only 3,851 people living in Vanderburgh County have been tested for the COVID–19? Â …that 185 people have tested positive for the COVID -19 virus and only 2 people have died? Â …about 182,000 people live in Vanderburgh County?
IS IT TRUE our “READERS POLLS†are non-scientific but trendy?