https://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/jail-recent-booking-records.aspx
VANDERBURGH COUNTY COUNCILMAN JOE KIEFER TO SEEK RE-ELECTION
VANDERBURGH COUNTY COUNCILMAN JOE KIEFER TO SEEK RE-ELECTION
Vanderburgh County Councilmember Joe Kiefer will file for re-election to his County Council At-large seat at Noon, Tuesday, January 21st at the Election Office in the Civic Center.
Joe feels that he seeks to serve another term in order to finish the goals he wanted to achieve.
After Joes filing, he will address those in attendance
Prosecutors Testify In Support Of Senate Bill 206
Senate Committee Hears Important Child Victim Bill
INDIANAPOLIS (January 16, 2020) – Tippecanoe County Prosecutor and President of the Association of Indiana Prosecuting Attorneys, Inc., Pat Harrington, testified in support of Senate Bill 206 on Wednesday.
SB 206, authored by Sen. Mark Messmer, R-Jasper, disallows discovery depositions of sex crime victims under the age of 16 unless the victim will not be available to testify at trial or the court finds that exceptional circumstances exist and the deposition is in the best interests of justice. Harrington told the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday the bill would go a long way in protecting child victims in sex crimes from experiencing further and unnecessary trauma. Between forensic interviews, discovery depositions conducted by defense attorneys and testifying in court, child victims are tragically re-traumatized on a regular basis, which can result in emotional distress, self-harm, and depression.
Prosecutors believe limiting depositions in these types of cases will benefit child sexual abuse victims, while also protecting a defendant’s constitutional right to confront their accusers at trial. The U.S. Supreme Court established in a 1977 case that the opportunity for cross-examination at trial is sufficient to satisfy the 6th Amendment right to confrontation.
“We understand the challenges at times of balancing the rights of a defendant with a victim’s right to be treated with respect and dignity,†Harrington said. “And this bill will help restore that balance and provide a more victim-centered approach for child victims who have been through a very traumatic experience.â€
Courtney Curtis, Assistant Executive Director for the Indiana Prosecuting Attorneys Council, also testified in support of SB 206. Curtis explained that in sexual abuse cases, the vast majority of child victims are given a forensic interview by a trained child forensic specialist. Their training is trauma-informed and designed to be legally sound in order to protect the integrity of the evidence, regardless of the child’s age or communication skills. Curtis also informed committee members that these forensic interviews of child victims are both audio and video recorded and those recordings are shared with defense attorneys.
SB 206 is expected to receive a vote in committee next week.
THE FIRST CASUALTY
THE FIRST CASUALTY
Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine
When our son, Jim, served in the Gulf War in 1990-91 and the Iraq War in 2006-07 and briefly in the Afghanistan War in 2007 he observed one of war’s most vital premises: our country should never fall behind the curve of military superiority. America was fortunate to recover from Pearl Harbor in time to help the Allies survive World War II. In the age of nuclear and cyber warfare, we might not be able to survive World War III with outdated technology.
The United States must remain vigilant. Vigilance does not call for aggression. In fact, our Constitution demands defense, not offense. However, we have been in an offensive mode militarily since we unwisely intervened in Viet Nam after France was driven out in 1954 after the Battle of Dien Bien Phu. Beginning in 1956 America saw fit to emulate the errors of the French and we have been intervening militarily in numerous countries ever since.
One thing we Americans thought we had learned from the discovery that our government had misled us into the Viet Nam War was the old truism that in war the first casualty is truth. This adage is often attributed to Aeschylus (525-456 BCE) but it probably has been noted by many observers of peoples drawn into wars by their leaders. By the way, those leaders have almost always not been the ones to do the fighting.
Such examples as King David sending Uriah to die in battle to hide David’s seduction of Uriah’s wife, Bathsheba, Second Samuel, chapter 11, or perhaps President George W. Bush’s false claim that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction or now our government’s claims about our war in Afghanistan may illustrate this ancient principle.
Just this month Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction John Sopko testified before the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee that America’s war in Afghanistan, our longest war ever, was conducted on a basis of lies to get and maintain Congressional political and funding support. The Washington Post newspaper published reports that Douglas Lute, former White House Afghan War official under both President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama, had testified America invaded Afghanistan in 2001 without a fundamental understanding of Afghanistan or what America planned to accomplish there.
Of course, Americans are no longer surprised that our government misleads us into wars. Unfortunately, we have become inured to it. That is the danger. It is as frightening as the old story of the boy who cried wolf. If our government continues to mislead us into unnecessary wars, will we citizens respond appropriately when, and it could happen someday, we are asked to sacrifice our lives and treasure for a just cause such as our country’s survival?
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
Or “Like†us on Facebook at JPegRanchBooks&Knitting
County Commissioners 2020 Meeting Dates
RESOLUTION CO.R-01-20-001
A RESOLUTION CONCERNING COUNTYÂ
COMMISSIONER MEETING DATES FOR 2020
WHEREAS, I.C. §36-2-2-6 requires regular meetings of the Board of Commissioners of Vanderburgh County, Indiana be established by resolution or ordinance on or before the first meeting in February of each year;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, by the Board of Commissioners of Vanderburgh County, Indiana as follows:Â the County Executive of Vanderburgh County shall hold a regular meeting at least once a month and at other times as needed to conduct all necessary business. The regular meetings of the Board of Commissioners of Vanderburgh County, Indiana in 2020 shall be held at 3:00 p.m. in Room 301 in the Civic Center Complex in Evansville, Indiana on the following dates:
January 14, 2020Â July 14, 2020
January 28, 2020 July 28, 2020
February 11, 2020August 11, 2020
February 25, 2020August 25, 2020
March 10, 2020September 8, 2020
March 24, 2020September 22, 2020
April 14, 2020October 13, 2020
April 28, 2020October 27, 2020
May 12, 2020November 10, 2020
May 26, 2020November 24, 2020
June 9, 2020December 1, 2020
June 23, 2020December 15, 2020
Rezoning petitions will be heard by the Board of Commissioners of Vanderburgh County, Indiana on the following dates of the County Commissioner meetings beginning at 3:00 p.m. in Room 301 of the Civic Center Complex in Evansville, Indiana.Â
January 28, 2020July 28, 2020
February 25, 2020August 25, 2020
March 24, 2020September 22, 2020Â
April 28, 2020October 27, 2020
May 26, 2020November 24, 2020
June 23, 2020December 15, 2020
Vanderburgh County Drainage Board meetings will be held on the following dates immediately following the regular meeting of the Board of Commissioners of Vanderburgh County, Indiana in Room 301 in the Civic Center Complex in Evansville, Indiana.
January 14, 2020July 14, 2020
January 28, 2020July 28, 2020
February 11, 2020August 11, 2020
February 25, 2020August 25, 2020
March 24, 2020September 22, 2020
April 14, 2020October 13, 2020
April 28, 2020October 27, 2020
May 12, 2020November 10, 2020
June 9, 2020December 15, 2020
June 23, 2020
The County Commissioners will hold a County Cabinet (department head) meeting prior to each regularly scheduled County Commissioner meeting beginning at 2:00 p.m. and immediately following the monthly Solid Waste Board District meeting in the County Commissioner conference room in Room 305 of the Civic Center Complex in Evansville, Indiana.
SO ADOPTED this 14th day of January, 2020.
Â
THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF
VANDERBURGH COUNTY INDIANA Â Â Â
Jeff Hatfield, President   Â
Ben Shoulders, Vice President   Â
Cheryl Musgrave, Member
ATTEST: Brian Gerth, Vanderburgh County Auditor
APPROVED AS TO LEGAL FORM: David L. Jones, Vanderburgh County Attorney
The Importance Of The Arts
Ex-Convicts Learn To Become Playwrights
Story by Dean Reynolds
About 650,000 people are released from U.S. prisons each year. What can be done to help them make the most of their freedom?
At the South Bend Civic Theatre in Indiana, even the most hardened ex-prisoners are being taught to write their own second act.
“As I begin to get closer and I begin to see the finish line, then it’s like, okay. How am I going to reintroduce myself to society? To the community? Because for the last 26 years, this is what they’ve known me as. But that’s not who I am.”
Films Examine Hoosier Urban and Rural Identities
In 2019, five award-winning Indiana filmmakers were chosen by Indiana Humanities to create short documentaries examining the ways Hoosiers experience urban and rural identities today. The films—about a dance instructor in Gary dealing with disinvestment in arts education, about a rural community newspaper in Wayne County filling the gap caused by media consolidation, about a southern Indiana composting business that hires the formerly incarcerated to transform the land and their lives—complicate our ideas about who lives in Indiana and what they’re up to.
Featured filmmakers include Dan Rybicky and Ryan Gleeson of Chicago’s Kartemquin Films, Emmy nominee Pat Wisniewski and Tom Desch, Bloomington-based duo Mitch Teplitsky and Gabriel Lantz, and Chad Perdue.
Watch the trailer.
Learn more about the films and RSVP for one of 10 stops around the state.
The importance of the arts
Story by Jay H. Dick
Do you use the arts and culture to help solve the issues list running through your head in the wee hours of the morning? Probably not, but that is starting to change as leaders are understanding the value that the arts and culture bring to the community.
When talking about the arts, what comes to mind? I would hazard to say that you are thinking about live theater, fine art galleries, the ballet, or opera. In other words, “high arts,†perhaps art for the elite, city/urban-centric arts, etc. But the arts are so much more than this, and they are actively working each day in your community, improving the livability and economy of your area. Read the full story.
A few things you can do…
- Participate in the Creative Community Pathway (LOI due Feb 27)
- Apply for an Arts Project Support grant (deadline March 5)
- Apply for the Quick Impact Placebased Grant (deadline March 6)
- Apply for the Creative Counties Placemaking Challenge (deadline March 13)
- Watch this video of our top three grant writing tips
- Apply for the CreatINg Places place-based crowdfunding program (applications accepted until all funds have been disbursed)
- Participate in this Historical Perceptions of Disability training (online and FREE)
- Find out where you are in your equity journey
- Take this organizational self-assessment about race
- Submit a presentation proposal for a 2020 VSA session (deadline May 15)
Warm wishes, Jasmine Bejar |