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AG Curtis Hill Releases Preliminary Report On Investigation Update On Status Of Fetal Remains

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Attorney General Curtis Hill has released a preliminary report on his office’s investigation into 2,411 medically preserved fetal remains and thousands of medical records discovered in the fall of 2019 among the personal belongings of the late Dr. Ulrich Klopfer, who performed abortions at clinics in Fort Wayne, Gary and South Bend.

Amid new details in the report is the fact that, based on the poor condition of the fetal remains and unreliable nature of the accompanying records, it is not possible to make an independent verification of the identities of the individual fetal remains. Accordingly, Attorney General Hill intends to have the fetal remains interred in a respectful and dignified manner in accordance with state law. Further, the Office of the Attorney General will follow state law in maintaining and safeguarding the medical records until such a time as they can be disposed of properly.

In addition, investigators have determined the remains appear to be from abortions Dr. Klopfer performed in Indiana from 2000 through 2003. At an earlier stage of the investigation, authorities believed the remains came from abortions performed from 2000 through 2002.

“From the time we first learned of the gruesome discovery of these remains,” Attorney General Hill said, “we have sought to exercise our statutory authority with great care and prudence. This case exemplifies the need for strong laws to ensure the dignified disposition of fetal remains, like those passed by the Indiana General Assembly in 2016 and upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2019.”

Commentary: Dachau’s Lessons For Today

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Commentary: Dachau’s Lessons For Today

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

DACHAU, Germany – The dead seem to whisper:

Do not forget.

It’s a clear cold day here at what was the Nazis’ first and longest operating concentration camp. I walk, my shoes crunching the gravel on the pathways, past and through the sites where people suffered and died.

I move first through the bunker where the prisoners slept. The wooden “bunks” are more like shelves, narrow ones at that. The bathrooms look just big enough to accommodate a high school basketball team, not the masses who were stuffed into Dachau.

This concentration camp opened just weeks after Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933. It was supposed to have a maximum capacity of 6,000 people.

It soon served as a prison for more than 30,000 people whose only crimes were worshipping in a different fashion, coming from a different place or living and loving in a different way. Despite the Nazi mania for cleanliness, disease and pestilence often swept through the overcrowded camp, in part because the Nazis didn’t bother to feed their prisoners well or keep them warm.

More than 200,000 people were imprisoned at Dachau.

More than 40,000 of them died here.

Their bodies were disposed of in a crematorium at a far corner of the camp. The Nazis hanged many of them from rafters right next to the ovens. Others the Nazis forced to kneel, then they killed the prisoners by firing single bullets into the back of the neck.

When the bodies of the dead were burned, their ashes were buried in mass graves, now marked as memorial sites.

It is at those memorials that the whispers seem the most urgent.

Do not forget.

As I stand at one of those memorials, I lift my gaze. The town of Dachau has grown and spread out since the last time I was here, nearly 35 years ago, but it still is a lovely, quiet place, a thriving suburb of Munich.

It is hard to imagine that such horrors could happen in such a seemingly normal place.

But that’s the thing about evil. In its way, it is like water. It finds any crack, over time widens that crack and then spreads where it will. What starts as a trickle becomes a flood.

And ends up in a place like this concentration camp.

Do not forget.

We like to reassure ourselves that what happened here at Dachau couldn’t happen now. We are too advanced. We know better.

But Germany was one of the most advanced countries in the world in the late 19th century and early 20th. Americans hungering for rigorous education traveled to study here. German culture, thought and art were at the front edge of human endeavor.

The street where Hitler lived when he began his climb to power, for example, also had served as home for Vladimir Lenin while he plotted to remodel the world and Mark Twain as he wrote “A Tramp Abroad” and part of “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.”

The spot where Hitler launched the “beer putsch” that landed him in jail but made him into a folk hero is in a substantial part of Munich. Then as now, Munich was a lively, cultured city, not a backwater or a benighted place. Just a couple hundred steps from where human history took this tragic turn sits one storefront after another of high-end shops that rival those on Madison Avenue.

If evil could flower in Munich, it could flower anywhere.

Do not forget.

As he began his rise, sophisticated Germans treated Hitler as a joke. They called his squared-off mustache a “snot block.”

But there were Germans threatened by their country’s sophistication, its acceptance of new ideas and differing lifestyles. They longed for simpler times. They feared “outsiders” and blamed them for any loss of status or well-being.

Hitler spoke to their fears.

He might not have made it, though, if many of Germany’s entrenched and wealthy establishment hadn’t thought they could use him to protect their interests and backed him.

It turned out that he couldn’t be used.

That he wasn’t a joke.

And tragedy followed.

Do not forget.

Darkness falls. The camp is closing.

As I walk away, the only sounds I hear are of the gravel’s crunch beneath my feet.

And the whispers of the dead.

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.

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VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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  Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Porsha P. Walker: Assisting a criminal (Level 6 Felony)

Tamra Jean Betz: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Theft (Class A misdemeanor), Possession of paraphernalia (Class C misdemeanor)

Jeffery Lorenzo Currie: Resisting law enforcement (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor), Reckless driving (Class C misdemeanor), Reckless driving (Class C misdemeanor), Driving while suspended (A infraction)

Rian James Poag: Resisting law enforcement (Level 6 Felony)

Charles E. Worman Jr.: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor), Possession of paraphernalia (Class C misdemeanor)

Christopher Michael Silvers: Escape (Level 5 Felony), Attempt Theft (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor), False informing (Class B misdemeanor)

Adrian M. Lopez: Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life (Level 5 Felony)

Joe Lovell Blair: Operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator (Level 6 Felony), Disregarding stop sign (C infraction)

Lisa Renee Bailey: Theft (Level 6 Felony)

Edy Beaugris: Unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon (Level 4 Felony)

Dara Marie Chamberlain: Theft (Level 6 Felony)

Lawrence Gerard Briggs: Resisting law enforcement (Level 6 Felony), Operating a vehicle while intoxicated (Class C misdemeanor), Operating a motor vehicle without ever receiving a license (Class C misdemeanor)

Joshua Lee Brown: Auto theft (Level 6 Felony), Driving while suspended (A infraction)

Alvin E. Buckley Jr.: Criminal confinement (Level 6 Felony), Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

Samantha A. Oglesby: Neglect of a dependent (Level 6 Felony)

Bryan E. Critchfield: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 5 Felony), Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor)

Timothy M. Roberts: Operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator (Level 6 Felony)

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE AREA

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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE AREA
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Full Time Receptionist/Clerical Assistant
Data Mail, Inc. – Evansville, IN
$10.00 – $11.50 an hour
Hours are Monday thru Friday 8:00am to 4:30pm. Responsibilities include answering a multi-line phone and routing calls as well as being able to answer some…
Easily apply
Sponsored
Full Time Receptionist/Clerical Assistant
Data Mail, Inc. – Evansville, IN
$10.50 – $11.50 an hour
Hours are Monday thru Friday 8:00am to 4:30pm. Responsibilities include answering a multi-line phone and routing calls as well as being able to answer some…
Easily apply
Dec 30
Receptionist
SCI Shared Resources, LLC 3.1/5 rating   940 reviews  – Evansville, IN
We currently have a part time opening for a Receptionist at Alexander Funerl Home North Chapel in Evansville, IN. Researches records for genealogy requests.
Dec 30
PT Front Desk Receptionist
Ivy Tech Community College 4.1/5 rating   885 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Provide customer service to students and visitors by providing directions and answering questions. Answer and transfer telephone calls appropriately.
Dec 24
Front Office Team Member – Business Assistant
Heartland Dental 2.8/5 rating   563 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Front Office Team Member – Business Assistant. Come Join our Successful Dental Practice as an Office Assistant – Business Assistant.
Dec 30
Receptionist
Springstone, Inc 2.7/5 rating   84 reviews  – Newburgh, IN
Brentwood Springs is a 48-bed behavioral hospital located near . The hospital offers inpatient and outpatient mental health and addiction treatment to adults,…
Dec 30
General Duty-Transitional Job
SCI Shared Resources, LLC 3.1/5 rating   940 reviews  – Evansville, IN
We currently have a part time opening for a Field Operations Support Assistant at Alexander Funeral Home in Evansville, IN. Greeting family members and friends.
Dec 30
Receptionist – Atria Newburgh
Atria Management Company, LLC – Newburgh, IN
Creates and prints fax cover sheets, memos, correspondence, reports, and other documents when necessary. Answers incoming telephone calls in a cheerful and…
Dec 30
Office Coordinator
comScore, Inc. 3.3/5 rating   87 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Office Coordinator for Evansville, IN and will remotely support Chicago, Madison and Boston. Provides general reception support to the office, such as answering…
Dec 30
Office Assistant – Oncology
St. Vincent, IN 3.7/5 rating   4,978 reviews  – Newburgh, IN
Office Assistant – Oncology – Full-Time, Days – St. Vincent Medical Group Oncology – Newburgh, IN. Monday – Friday 7:30am to 4:00pm.
Dec 25
Legal Assistant/Secretary
Attorney Robert Canada – Evansville, IN
$18 – $20 an hour
Legal assistant needed immediately. Email resume and availability. Job Types: Full-time, Part-time Salary: $18.00 to $20.00 /hour Experience: * Legal Office…
Easily apply
Dec 24
Front Desk Receptionist
Confidential – Evansville, IN
Responsive employer
FT Front Deck Receptionist. Medical office. Fast paced office. Communication and teamwork a must. Able to multi-task. Prefer medical office experience x 1 year…
Easily apply
Sponsored
Front Desk Receptionist
EyeCare Consultants – Evansville, IN
Responsive employer
Eyecare Consultants has an opening for front desk receptionist. This position facilitates the patient registration and check-in process of the medical office…
Easily apply
Sponsored
Medical Front Desk Registration & Reception
Mercy Urgent Care LLC – Newburgh, IN
Mercy Urgent Care has one (1) full time opening for an experienced and positive attitude Medical Front Desk Registration & Reception position.
Easily apply
Sponsored

The Best-Selling Wine in the US

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The Best-Selling Wine in the US

Jeff Siegel

Prosecco, with its light, fruity-flowery flavor profile and affordable price point, has become a ­everyday wine and the best-selling sparkling wine in the US, as well as the world. And it can be the perfect way to ring in the New Year or any other holiday…birthday…or accomplishment you want to celebrate without paying a small fortune for a similar amount of Champagne. If you want to learn about this tasty tipple that is taking the world by storm, plus some budget-friendly top-shelf bottles for your next bash, keep reading…

From Cheap To Cheerful

At the turn of this century, Prosecco all too often was poorly made—too sweet or even too bitter…fizzy instead of bubbly…and bland, without any recognizable flavors. Then, about a decade ago, Italy’s Prosecco producers changed all of that. They were facing increasing competition from Spain, where Cava sparkling wines offered a better wine for the price. So the Italians started to use higher-quality grapes and paid more attention to the production process.

Prosecco 101

It’s made with the glera grape, a white grape that used to be called prosecco, until about 10 years ago. Glera grapes give the wine lemon and stone fruit flavors, much different from the apple and pear flavors in the Chardonnay grape used to make Champagne.

Most sparkling wine is non-vintage—that is, the grapes used to make the wine come from several years of harvests. Prosecco is no exception.

Prosecco tends to be lower in ­alcohol, often just 10% or 11% and rarely more than 11.5%. That compares with 13% to 15% for still wines and 12% for most other sparkling wines.

Prosecco is made in northeastern Italy, and only wine made there can be called Prosecco. The lone exception is Australia, which is not bound by the rules of the European Union. The country is in the middle of a legal battle to be able to use the name, which its winemakers feel entitled to as the grape that they’re growing for this wine was called “prosecco” until fairly recently.

Prosecco is a little sweeter than other sparkling wines, even when it’s labeled brut—which is a sparkling-wine talk for a dry wine. You’ll also see ­Prosecco labeled as “extra dry,” which, confusingly, is a little sweeter than brut. In both cases, the wines aren’t as sweet as white Zinfandel, for instance.

Top Prosecco Picks

These Proseccos, at a variety of prices, provide a taste of what the Italian sparkling wine has to offer…

Carpenè Malvolti 1868 ­Valdobbiadene Prosecco Superiore DOCG NV, about $30. This higher-end product competes admirably with the Champagne market. It is balanced with tight, bursting bubbles and lemon-lime fruit. The DOCG designation is part of the Italian wine-naming system, which is based on where the grapes are grown. It’s meant to denote a high-quality product made under strict regulations and to assure the buyer that it was produced in the region it claims, since some pieces of land within the same area produce grapes that make higher-quality wine.

Adami Prosecco Brut Garbèl NV, about $16. A bit like a Spanish Cava, with an almost green-apple fruit taste and less lemon and lime. The bubbles also are sturdier. That makes it a zestier wine, and it’s mild sweetness comes across as part of the whole and not something that stands out. Adami is one of my favorite Proseccos.

Nino Franco Rustico Valdobbiadene Prosecco Superiore DOCG NV, about $16. This sparkler is one of Prosecco’s great values, costing about as much as the most popular supermarket labels but offering layers and layers of interest. It’s not quite as soft as the most well-known brands, and the bubbles are tinier and race more quickly to the top of the glass, making a very ­pleasing ­sensation while you’re drinking it. There’s also a fuller, richer mouthfeel, and the lemon-lime fruit isn’t quite as candied. This is a great holiday sparkling wine—consumer-friendly in both price and taste.

Valdo Prosecco Brut NV, about $13. This is a Prosecco for wine drinkers who don’t think they will like anything other than Champagne. Whereas most Proseccos have a single note of sweetness, Valdo has more structure, with a noticeable beginning, middle and end. The beginning is almost yeasty, a common quality in Champagne, while the lemon fruit is barely sweet and the bubbles are tight and zippy. It speaks to what wine geeks call terroir—making a wine that reflects where the grapes are grown.

Astoria Prosecco del Veneto NV, about $13. Another oustanding value, the ­Astoria has an almost creamy quality that takes it beyond the sweetness of the grape. There is some apple fruit to go with the lemon, and the bubbles are tiny and firm.

Prosecco Cocktails

Prosecco’s less expensive price and ­softer approach also make it ideal for adding mixers to create fun cocktails. Its sweetness doesn’t need to be enhanced much at all, allowing the character of the wine to show through.

Prosecco Mimosa: This twist on the brunch standard has a tart and herbal flair. Take one-half cup of grapefruit juice, thyme leaves from five to six sprigs of fresh thyme, one tablespoon of honey and a handful of ice. Mix well, strain into two Champagne flutes and add chilled Prosecco. Garnish with ­additional thyme leaves.

Prosecco Negroni: This delicious twist on the famous cocktail couldn’t be much easier to make. Mix four parts chilled Prosecco, one part sweet vermouth and one part Campari. Serve in an old-fashioned glass with a twist of orange peel.

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” January 1, 2020

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“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab”Januray 1, 2019

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” was created because we have a couple of commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE” or “Readers Forum” columns concerning National or International issues.
The majority of our “IS IT TRUE” columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give our more opinionated readers exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and Middle Jab and RIGHT JAB”  column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.
We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB” AND “MIDDLE JAB” AND “RIGHT JAB” several times a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB” is a liberal view, “MIDDLE JAB” is the libertarian view and the “RIGHT JAB is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments in this column is free to do so.

party loyalty

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Call for party loyalty for Evansville attorney job falls flat

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. — A tribal call to strict party loyalty urges Democratic City Council members to oust their Republican lawyer — but Evansville isn’t Washington, several of them said.

At least three members of the new 7-2 Democratic majority council want to re-up with Josh Claybourn, who has been the body’s lead attorney since early 2015. Two others say they are undecided in a contest that also includes former Democratic Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel and Rep. Ryan Hatfield, a Democrat who represents Evansville.

That’s out of step with local Democratic Party chair Edie Hardcastle, who has called for Claybourn’s ouster in favor of a Democrat. One Democratic council member also reports receiving a call from John Zody, chairman of the Indiana Democratic Party. Another reports being called by Chuck Whobrey, president of Teamsters Local 215.

The City Council is expected to appoint its attorney at its Jan. 13 meeting. Whoever is named should be a Democrat, Hardcastle declared.

More: Weinzapfel among those vying be the new Evansville City Council’s lead attorney

More: Weinzapfel confirms rumors: He’s exploring another campaign

Some of the time, the Democrats need to be on opposing sides of the Republican mayor (Lloyd Winnecke),” she said. “And the City Council (attorney) would need to be somebody that the Democrats could reasonably make sure was operating in the best interests of what the Democrats have in mind for their policy positions.”

Claybourn, who once called himself an informal advisor to Winnecke’s early campaigns, likely would “be a direct line to the mayor,” Hardcastle charged.

Hardcastle sent a letter to “Democratic Party friends and donors” Thursday providing cell phone numbers and email addresses for four City Council Democrats — Jonathan Weaver, Jim Brinkmeyer, Missy Mosby and Kaitlin Moore Morley — and asking them to lobby the four to appoint a Democrat.

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Delivery: Varies

“The importance of a Democratic attorney has been clearly demonstrated at the County government level where now half of all County employees have been organized into the Teamsters Union,” Hardcastle wrote. “In addition, Vanderburgh County hired a Compliance Officer who now assures serious efforts are made to hire minority and women-owned businesses.

“Accomplishments like these happen when we hire attorneys who are Democrats.”

Employees of county departments vote to unionize with the approval of their elected department heads and the Democratic-controlled Board of Commissioners, which signs county government contracts. Most of the several departments that voted this year to unionize are headed by Republicans.

“It literally has nothing to do with the party affiliation of the commissioners’ attorney,” said Republican Commissioner Cheryl Musgrave, who voted to approve the contracts.

Musgrave said — and Democratic Commissioner Jeff Hatfield agreed — that the compliance officer was hired at Hatfield’s suggestion. Asked if he was prompted to act by an attorney, Hatfield said he was not.

More: Election 2019: Democrats claim seven of nine Evansville City Council seats

More: 2019 Evansville election: Winnecke rolls to re-election, GOP suffers stunning setback

‘Evansville is too small’

Weaver, who supports Claybourn, said rigidly partisan politics and ‘R’ vs. ‘D’ intrigue are not the way forward.

“Evansville is too small. We’ve got to get along with both sides to get stuff done,” said Weaver, an at-large council member who has been elected citywide three times now.

Weaver pointed to the Democratic majority that ran the City Council from 2012 until 2016. That group included several fiercely partisan critics of Winnecke who accused other council Democrats, including Weaver, of being too close to the Republican mayor.

“The past four years has been a godsend compared to my first four years,” Weaver said.

Hiring an attorney who has a relationship with Winnecke might actually help, Weaver said, because it could ensure the mayor would “maybe hear our side of the story better.”

Brinkmeyer, the City Council’s president, said naming a Democrat isn’t of paramount importance to him. Brinkmeyer supports Claybourn, as does Mosby.

“What’s important to me is hiring an attorney that I believe in and can totally trust,” Brinkmeyer said.

Two other Democrats — Ben Trockman and Moore Morley, who were elected last month — said they are uncommitted. Each said qualifications and ability to work with council matter more than party affiliation.

Zac Heronemus, a Democrat elected last month, did not return text and phone messages. Alex Burton, also newly elected, said he does want a Democrat and someone who lives in Evansville. Claybourn has lived in Newburgh as Evansville’s city attorney.

More: What went wrong for Republicans in Evansville’s city election?

Behind the scenes campaign

The campaign to become the City Council’s next lead attorney has been waged behind the scenes, with members reporting they have been courted by all three candidates.

And others.

Mosby said she got a call from state Democratic chief Zody asking her to back a Democrat for the legal post. Zody did not return a phone message from the Courier & Press. Moore Morley confirmed she received a call from Whobrey, who declined to comment.

Hardcastle sent an email to the Democratic Central Committee last week scolding Claybourn for contacting Democrats “representing himself as an ‘active and prominent Dem/leader.'”

“Mr. Claybourn is a donor to Republican candidates as well as the Republican PAC (political action committee) which was used to fight against our Democratic candidates,” Hardcastle wrote. “In addition, his voting (record) is uniformly Republican.”

Hardcastle’s email called Claybourn “an opportunist, playing both sides.”

Claybourn said Hardcastle’s charges are easy to knockdown.

“When I said ‘Democratic Party leader,’ I was referring to the recipients of the text, not myself,” he said of a text message that he said went to three Democrats.

“I have done stuff for candidates of both parties, including Democrats,” Claybourn said. “I’ve always taken the position when I represent City Council that, if you are an incumbent, I will support you, and I will not support the person running against you.'”

Hardcastle said Claybourn made other remarks in the text indicating he should be considered a Democrat, but Claybourn said she is mischaracterizing them. He said he no longer has the text. Hardcastle declined to provide it.

Campaign finance reports for 2019 show that Claybourn made donations to Democratic as well as Republican City Council candidates. He gave $300 in January to Victory Fund, a local political action committee that supports Democratic candidates — and $250 in August to Evansville’s Future, a committee supporting local Republicans.

The local GOP is seeking a recount of Mosby’s 19-vote victory over Republican Natalie Rascher — but Claybourn is helping Mosby, charging her nothing for his services.

Claybourn’s voting record does show he has voted consistently in Republican primary elections since at least 2004. He is also a former treasurer of the local GOP. It has been in more recent years, Claybourn said, that he has recast himself as a bipartisan supporter of City Council incumbents in both parties.

The City Council attorney job pays the attorney’s firm $60,044.50 on a flat rate annual contract. Any special litigation the City Council would need would be compensated at $150 per hour. The attorney is an independent contractor, not a city employee.

Hardcastle makes the point that the job doesn’t come with a lifetime appointment.

“It’s a position that probably should turn over on a regular basis,” she said.

Staff Writer John T. Martin contributed to this report.

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EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT