https://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/jail-recent-booking-records.aspx
HAPPENINGS AT THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY GOP
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Evansville’s Future Welcomes New Executive Director
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Man’s Third Vehicle Pursuit Ends With His Arrest
Man’s Third Vehicle Pursuit Ends With His Arrest
The Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office has arrested a wanted felon who fled in a vehicle for the third time since 2017.
Sheriff’s deputies and Evansville Police officers assigned to the Joint Drug Task Force developed information that Mr. Bret Weir, who had active felony warrants, was living at a residence in Pleasant Ridge Subdivision. On Monday, February 10, 2020, at approximately 3:00 PM Weir was observed at the MotoMart convenience store located on Mariner Drive. Due to Weir’s previous history of fleeing from law enforcement, the decision was made to stop Weir at his residence after he arrived home.
As Weir arrived at his residence on Pleasant Ridge Drive, deputies pulled in behind his vehicle and attempted to block his escape. Instead of surrendering, Weir drove through a grass lot and was able to get back out onto the street. After a brief vehicle pursuit, Weir exited his vehicle and fled on foot. An Evansville Police canine apprehended Weir a short time later in a wooded area west of the trailer park.
Mr. Weir previously avoided arrest on November 06, 2019, after fleeing in a vehicle when an Evansville Police officer tried to stop him for a traffic violation. The Evansville Police and the Sheriff’s Office discontinued that pursuit when Mr. Weir’s driving became too dangerous to the public. A warrant for Resisting Law Enforcement as a Level 6 Felony was later obtained by the Evansville Police Department. Prior to this, Mr. Weir fled from a Sheriff’s Office deputy in September of 2017. Mr. Weir was in a stolen vehicle when he was stopped for reckless driving, but he evaded arrest after losing the pursing deputy near Alexander Memorial Cemetery.
ARRESTED:
Bret Wayne Weir (pictured above), 31, of Evansville. Resisting Law Enforcement as a Level 6 Felony, Resisting Law Enforcement as a Level 6 Felony (Warrant), Resisting Law Enforcement as a Level 6 Felony (Warrant), Reckless Driving as a Class C Misdemeanor (Warrant), Reckless Driving as a Class C Misdemeanor (Warrant), Conversion as a Class A Misdemeanor (Warrant)
Presumption of Innocence Notice: The fact that a person has been arrested or charged with a crime is merely an accusation. The defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.
Today’s Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners Agenda
AGENDA
 The Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners
February 11, 2020, at 3:00 pm, in Room 301At hr Civic Center
- Call to Order
- Attendance
- Pledge of Allegiance
- Action ItemsÂ
- Permission to Advertise: 2019 Statement Receipts and Expenditures
- Vanderburgh County-Tony Monks Settlement and Release Agreement
- County Auditor:
- Maximus Consulting Services Termination Letter
- Dossett Consulting, LLC Professional Consulting Services Agreement
- First Reading of Ordinance CO.02-20-002: Amending Ch. 17.24: Off-Street Parking and Loading
- Second Reading of Ordinance CO.07-19-016: Amending C. 17.12.020: Minimum Floor Area
- Burdette Park:
- RC Beverage Contract Renewal
- Oswald Marketing Contract Renewal
- Town and Country Ford Service Vehicle
- Health Department:Â
- Administrative Assistant Contract with Riley Smith
- Review and Approval of Overdose Data to Action Grant
- Department Head Reports
- New Business
- Major Bill White Valentine Card
- Old Business
- Consent Items
- Approval of January 28, 2020, Meeting Minutes
- Employment ChangesÂ
- County Engineer:Â
- Department Reports and Claims
- Approve Travel Request for 2020 Purdue Road School Transportation Conference
- County Auditor: Claims Voucher Reports: 1/27/2020 through 1/31/2020 and 2/3/2020 through 2/7/2020
- County Assessor: Surplus Request
- Sherriff Department: Logan’s Promise Road Closure Request
- County Commissioners: Coliseum Gaming Commission Letter
- Superintendent of County Buildings: Letter of Agency for Coroner’s Office Phones
- Arc of Evansville May-December 2019 Reports
- Public Comment
- Adjournment
Griffin Files To Run For House District 75
Warrick County resident Mike Griffin filed his paperwork with the Secretary of State on Friday, February 7th, to put his name on the Republican ballot to run for State Representative of House District 75.
With more than 40 years of experience in the finance industry, Griffin has developed new business while maintaining existing accounts and overseeing hundreds of employees.
“By using my experience in finance, business development, and management experience I want to help keep Indiana fiscally responsible and bringing more workforce development to House District 75,†said Griffin. “I want to represent the citizens of the district by building on what State Representative Ron Bacon has done for the past 10 years.â€
Griffin wants to maintain the tax cuts Bacon put in place during his time in office. His platform also contains finishing bringing high-speed broadband infrastructure to the District, driving more funding to teacher pay and continuing to cut government red tape for more efficiency and protecting the First and Second Amendment rights of Hoosiers. While in office, Griffin would build on Governor Holcomb’s agenda of maternal and infant mortality by protecting the mothers and their unborn. He also believes there is still work to do when it comes to addressing Indiana’s drug epidemic.
Griffin resides in Newburgh with his wife Patty. The couple has three daughters – Laurel, Lindsay, and Carly.
House District 75, includes most of Warrick County and the Southern half of Spencer and Pike counties.
EPA at 50: Progress In Protecting Our Nation’s Surface Waters
In commemoration of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) 50th anniversary, the agency is celebrating progress that has been made in protecting America’s waters throughout the month of February. This week highlights the agency’s progress in protecting our nation’s surface waters to improve these ecosystems and help protect public health.
“EPA is proud of the significant progress we have made in protecting and restoring our nation’s waters, particularly our surface waters. Many of our lakes, rivers and streams that were once severely contaminated now support healthy aquatic ecosystems and the surrounding communities,†said EPA Assistant Administrator for Water Dave Ross. “Working with the agency’s federal, state, local, tribal and water sector partners, we continue driving progress that protects the environment and human health.â€
EPA kicked off February’s theme of protecting America’s waters by co-hosting a public meeting of the Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia Task Force in Washington, DC. The Hypoxia Task Force is a group of 12 states, a tribal representative and five federal agencies that work collaboratively to combat the nation’s largest hypoxic (low-oxygen) aquatic zone, which is located in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Reducing excess nutrients across a subcontinental watershed where millions of people live and the land supports a prospering nation is an enormous job that will take years to accomplish. At this meeting, states and federal agencies highlighted successes and remaining challenges in managing excess nutrients in surface waters throughout the Mississippi River basin.
Following the Hypoxia Task Force meeting, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced that it will make $17.5 million available in
2020 to support conservation investments by agriculture producers through its Mississippi River Basin Healthy Watersheds Initiative, and more than $38 million to support producers in 300 small watersheds across the nation, including many watersheds in the Mississippi River Basin. EPA welcomes USDA’s commitment to helping producers improve water quality, restore wetlands and enhance wildlife habitat, while ensuring the economic viability and productivity of agricultural lands.
Additionally, EPA houses a wide range of programs that are making progress protecting our nation’s surface waters. For example, EPA’s Section 319 Program has helped restore 832 impaired waterbodies, including helping partially or fully restore 250,000 acres of lakes and ponds as well as 10,000 miles of rivers and streams, since 2005 by providing funds to states, tribes and territories to help address nonpoint sources of pollution. Additionally, EPA’s National Estuary Program, with its partners, has protected and restored more than 2 million acres of estuary habitat since 2000. The agency has also helped restore approximately 4,316 acres of land and wetlands since 2013 through investing nearly $4.1 million into 193 community-based Five Star and Urban Waters Restoration Grant Program projects.