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The Reitz Home Museum Names New Executive Director

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The Reitz Home Museum Board of Trustees proudly announces the appointment of Joseph Lutz as the museum’s Executive Director. Joseph has been serving as the Museum Curator since his hiring last June.

“Joseph has proven his love and dedication to the Reitz Home Museum over the last year,” offered Jennifer Stevens, President of the Reitz Home Museum Board of Trustees. “He has worked diligently to develop a comprehensive inventory assessment of the museum’s treasured assets, while also doubling the number of active docents. I’m confident that Joseph’s skill set will allow the Reitz Home Museum to continue to be a vibrant cultural asset for Evansville,” Stevens said.

Prior to joining the Reitz Home Museum, Lutz served in the Peace Corps in Moldova where he served as a Community and Organizational Development Advisor and provided technical assistance to the Jewish History Museum of Moldova.

“History, and enhancing community outreach of museums, has long been a passion of mine,” Lutz said. “I have a special fondness for the Reitz Home Museum, and its fascinating historical ties to Evansville’s early days. I look forward to expanding the museum’s relevance in the community.”

The Reitz Home Museum, situated in the heart of the city’s downtown historic preservation district, was built in 1871 by John Augustus Reitz and is Evansville’s only Victoria House Museum. It is one of the finest examples of French Second Empire architecture in the country.

Lutz replaces former Executive Director Natalie Singer, who is now Director of Sponsorships and Giving at the EVSC Foundation and a member of the Reitz Home Board of Trustees.

Rep. McNamara’s new law safeguarding mental health debriefings for public safety officials ceremonially signed by the governor

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STATEHOUSE–
The governor recently ceremonially signed State Rep. Wendy McNamara’s (R-Evansville) new law protecting critical incident stress management (CISM) services for first responders.

McNamara said CISM debriefings are an important mental health tool for public safety officials after facing a stressful or dangerous situation while on the job.

House Enrolled Act 1118 changes the Indiana code so any first responder using a CISM debriefing will not be compelled to disclose those conversations in a civil, criminal or administrative proceeding.

“Our police, firefighters, EMS providers and other first responders face danger day in and day out,” McNamara said. “By protecting these mental health discussions, our first responders will be more empowered to care for themselves.”

First responders face PTSD and depression at a rate five times higher than the civilian population, according to the Ruderman Family Foundation. To help them, Indiana has more than 40 CISM teams, according to the Indiana Department of Homeland Security, comprised of trained peer volunteers who can offer care at the scene or counsel for responders afterwards.

McNamara said this change could incentivize first responders to use CISM debriefings, as they will not have to worry about disclosing private information.

To learn more about House Enrolled Act 1118 and other new laws, visit iga.in.gov.

 

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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Booked Last 24 Hours
Name
Age
Address
Charge
SIMON, WILLIAM B JR (B/M)
37
N MAIN ST, EVANSVILLE IN
INTIMIDATION WITH A DEADLY WEAPON
DOMESTIC BATTERY-SIMPLE ASSAULT
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE- PUBLIC INTOXICATION BY ALCOHOL [BM]
LOCKRIDGE, DESHAWNDRICK MARSHUN (B/M)
25
W IOWA ST, EVANSVILLE IN
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION- RESISTING LAW ENFORCEMENT
VCCC FILED PTR
FAMILY OFFENSE- INVASION OF PRIVACY
LEQUATTE, VON ERNEST (W/M)
65
SUWANNEE DR, EVANSVILLE IN
BATTERY- DOMESTIC
DOMESTIC BATTERY-ADULT KNOW PRESENCE OF CHILD LESS THAN 16
CARRENO, AMANDA JORDAN (W/F)
44
DORAL COURT, EVANSVILLE IN
OTHER AGENCIES CHARGES
BLACKWELL, TAMAJE TYRESE (B/M)
26
OAK ST , EVANSVILLE IN
THEFT- SHOPLIFTING – NIBRS
BRAKER, BENJAMIN DONALD JAMES (W/M)
31
E MISSOURI ST , EVANSVILLE IN
CONFINEMENT
BATTERY- DOMESTIC
CLARK, TERRY JOE (W/M)
64
N KERTH, EVANSVILLE IN
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION
THOMAS, MARCUS DWAYNE (B/M)
35
JOHN ST, EVANSVILLE IN
PAROLE VIOLATION
WILLIAMS, JESSE MARTIN (W/M)
50
E COLUMBIA ST, EVANSVILLE IN
THEFT- SHOPLIFTING – NIBRS
CRIMINAL TRESPASS
GARCIA-CRUZ, PEDRO JUAN (W/M)
28
SE EIGHTH ST, EVANSVILLE IN
INTIMIDATION WITH A DEADLY WEAPON
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION
CRIMINAL RECKLESSNESS W/DEADLY WEAPON
CRIMINAL TRESPASS
KORN, BRIAN KEITH (W/M)
64
PADDOCK DR , EVANSVILLE IN
RESIDENTIAL ENTRY
CRIMINAL TRESPASS
BROWN, MIKKO MONTREL (B/F)
56
CHERRY ST, EVANSVILLE IN
MOTOR VEHICLE- LEAVING THE SCENE OF A CRASH- PROPERTY DAMAGE
OPERATING OR PERMITTING OPERATION WITHOUT FINANCIAL RESPONSI
TRAFFIC-OPERATE WHILE HTV FOR LIFE
RAY, NATHANIEL JAMES (W/M)
34
BARTONS LN, EVANSVILLE IN
OTHER AGENCIES CHARGES
LESLIE, SAMANTHA LAUREN (W/F)
34
MARY ST , EVANSVILLE IN
BURGLARY
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE- POSSESS PARAPHERNALIA
HEALTH- POSSESS HYPODERMIC SYRINGE OR NEEDLE
CADET, MISERY (B/M)
45
LODGE AVE, EVANSVILLE IN
TREATMENT COURT FILED PTR
JOHNSON, VERONICA MARCELL (B/F)
58
S KERTH AVE, EVANSVILLE IN
INTIMIDATION WITH A DEADLY WEAPON
MEINERT, SCOTT ALLEN (W/M)
64
HAWTHORNE AVE, EVANSVILLE IN
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE- POSSESSION MARIJUANA/HASH OIL/HASHISH/
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE- POSSESS METHAMPHETAMINE
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE- POSSESS PARAPHERNALIA
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE- POSSESS PARAPHERNALIA
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION- FAIL TO APPEAR
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION- FAIL TO APPEAR
ALVEY, THOMAS DALE (W/M)
30
E IOWA ST , EVANSVILLE IN
BATTERY- DOMESTIC
COMMUNICATION- INTERFERE IN THE REPORTING OF A CRIME
GARRETT, DANIEL NELSON (W/M)
34
ASBURY DR , EVANSVILLE IN
COMMUNICATION- INTIMIDATION
PUBLIC ORDER- DISORDERLY CONDUCT
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION- RESISTING LAW ENFORCEMENT

Color Swirl on the Lawn | July 9

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Event Details:

Date: Wednesday July 9

Time:  2 PM

Location: Willard Park

 

Color Swirl Tie-Dye in the Park – Summer Reading Program

 

Let your creativity shine! Join us Tuesday, July 9 at 2 PM for Color Swirl Tie-Dye in the Park, a vibrant outdoor event where kids can dive into tie-dye fun and other messy, hands-on activities.

 

Part of our Color Our World Summer Reading series, this program is all about color, creativity, and a little bit of mess! Be sure to bring something white and 100% cotton to tie-dye—like a t-shirt, tote bag, or bandana.

 

To sign up for the Summer Reading Program and view the full schedule, visit: https://www.willardlib.org/children-s-summer-reading-program

Tick-borne diseases on the rise: How can you stay safe this summer?

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Reported cases of tick-borne diseases are sharply rising in the U.S.—and summer is peak season for ticks. What can folks do to stay safe? Which areas are more prone to ticks? What’s contributing to the rise in cases? Help your viewers know what the research says and what info to trust.

Dr. Maria Diuk-Wasser, professor of ecology, evolution, and environmental biology at Columbia University, is available for interviews. She specializes in how climate change impacts the emergence of vector-borne and zoonotic diseases, including the recent emergence of tick-borne pathogens, and she can explain the latest research for your viewers in plain language, not jargon.

Dr. Diuk-Wasser can speak about: 

  • Tick-borne disease basics, such as which tick-borne diseases are found in the U.S., which tick species carry them, and data on the rising prevalence of both ticks and tick-borne disease;
  • Which ticks are expanding their ranges, including blacklegged ticks (which carry Lyme disease), and lone star ticks (which can trigger meat allergies in people) and the reasons why ticks are spreading, including climate change, land use changes, and human behavior;
  • Her research on how risk of getting infected by a tick depends on where you live (including in the city), what activities you do, and where you travel; and tips for precautions and what to do if you find a tick.

WHAT IS IN CONTROL?

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redline

GAVEL GAMUT

By Jim Redwine

www.jamesmredwine.com

(Week of 07 July 2025)

WHAT IS IN CONTROL?

One of the first lectures I received in law school was about how jury trials had changed over about 2,500 years; they hadn’t. According to my law professor, if we budding attorneys had walked into the courtroom in Athens for the trial of Socrates in 399 B.C., we would have easily understood the proceeding. Socrates was charged with corrupting Athenian youth with his views on the prevalent religion and government. He was convicted by a jury of about 500 citizens. Socrates was prosecuted by three senators and he defended himself. In other words, that court of over 2,000 years ago functioned like most courts of the 21st century, until the advent of smart telephones, artificial intelligence and rapidly changing electronic technology.

Unlike the practice of medicine, according to our law professor, that a physician of modern times would not even recognize, until recently the legal profession stoically struggled to deliver justice about the same way our Stone Age progenitors did. As science reached for the stars, the Star Chamber was right at home with the law. Most lawyers, judges and juries sought just verdicts, but often did so with quill pens, arcane fixtures and cloistered proceedings. Well, those honored, if often questioned, days have recently crashed upon the shoals of instant and ubiquitous information and misinformation. And much as the art world and the defense industry are wringing their hands and racing to keep up with machines gone mad, the legal profession is struggling to preserve the First Amendment’s guarantees of Freedom of Speech and the Press along with the Sixth Amendment’s guarantees of Due Process and a Fair Trial.

For thousands of years societies have confidently relied upon jurors to hear cases without being influenced by prejudicial information from outside of the court. Today, judges cannot just order jurors to not read newspapers, or listen to radio or television stories about a case. Jurors in 2025 are just like virtually every other child, teenager, adult and elderly person; everyone has a smart phone to which they are addicted. All the judicial admonishments judges can think of will not defeat the deep-seated need by jurors to “tune in and turn on” and, most likely buy into, the often incorrect information about practically anything, including “facts” about an on-going case.

The Founding Fathers most feared centralized governmental power and believed the best defense to it was for the public to have almost unfettered Freedom of Speech and for the media to be almost immunized from governmental restraint. Of course, America’s legal system has adapted many times to changes in our society. It will surely find ways to deal with the internet. However, the age-old reliance on the omnipotence and wisdom of the trial judge’s instructions has already become as much of a relic as the pyramids. And, just as the pyramids still inspire us, our historically provident legal system probably will too.

However, we in the legal profession must face the reality that Facebook and its ilk have to be dealt with because the populace will not stand for them to be destroyed. Surely, if I were back in that first law school class today, the professor would evince a different perspective on 2025’s legal system.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

HOT JOBS

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Celebrating Independence Day

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by Wendy McNamara,

Dear Neighbor,

Join me in celebrating our country’s independence and saluting those who fight to keep our nation free. I wish you and your family a safe and fun July 4th.