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10th-ranked University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball tips off the 2019-20 Great Lakes Valley Conference schedule on the road when it travels to McKendree University Tuesday in Lebanon, Illinois. Game time is slated for 7:30 p.m.
Game coverage for USI Men’s Basketball in 2019-20, including live stats, video, and audio broadcasts, is available at GoUSIEagles.com. The games also can be heard on ESPN 97.7FM and 95.7FM The Spin.
USI Men’s Basketball Week 5 Quick Notes:
USI goes to 5-0 after cruising through the Oaks. USI remains perfect after five games after posting a121-58 victory Oakland City University. Junior forward Josh Price led the seven Eagles in double-digits with 23 points and a team-best 10 rebounds. USI also shot 61.7 percent (50-81) as a team from the field, 55.6 percent from downtown (10-18).
5-0 for the Eagles. USI is 5-0 to start the season for the 21st time in the history of the program.
USI ties record vs. Oakland City. The Eagles tied a record with seven players with double-digit points versus Oakland City. USI match a mark that has been reached four times with the last coming in the 2012-13 season versus the University of California Clermont.
Most points since 2007. The 121 points versus Oakland City was the most since the Eagles reached 125 points versus Judson College in November of 2007.  Â
Career and season highs for USI. USI players posted 17 career and season highs in the win over the Mighty Oaks.
USI moves up in the polls. USI rose to 10th in the NABC and the D2SIDA Top 25 polls. The top 10 ranking is the first for the Eagles since the 2016-17 season when they were 10th in the February 21 poll.
USI picked 2nd in GLVC preseason poll. USI was picked to place second in the GLVC for 2019-20 in a vote of the GLVC coaches.
USI vs. McKendree. The Eagles hold a 12-7 all-time record lead against McKendree University after posting a 102-60 win in Lebanon, Illinois. USI also has won the last seven games versus McKendree.
McKendree in 2019-20. McKendree is 3-2 in 2019-20 and has won its last two outings. The Bearcats are picked to finish ninth in the GLVC preseason poll.
Yinchi is a young female orange tabby! She’s a year & a half old. She’s litterbox-trained and lives quite peacefully with other cats. She is currently adoptable at River Kitty Cat Café in downtown Evansville! Her adoption fee is $40 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!
Governor Holcomb Statement on Cease and Desist Letters
INDIANAPOLIS — Governor Eric J. Holcomb offered the following statement after his General Counsel Joe Heerens sent the attached cease and desist letters to “Reveal†and the “Indianapolis Star.â€
“While filing a cease and desist letter is an unusual step to take, I’m compelled to do so. I will not let the false accusations about Indiana state employees and me stand, as first published by California-based Reveal and followed soon thereafter by the Indianapolis Star. Unfortunately, other news organizations in our state have either published the same story in its entirety or other versions unchecked for truth and accuracy, further perpetuating a false narrative.Â
 “We have worked hard over the years in Indiana to create an environment for our citizens, state employees, and businesses based on accountability and fairness, where the rules are fairly applied to all based in truth.
 “There are many good, tough, and thorough reporters in the Fourth Estate who seek to educate by way of the truth. Unfortunately, when Reveal and the Indy Star worked in conjunction to publish a false story, it tarnishes journalistic integrity across the board and the public loses faith in where they get their news.
STATE OF INDIANA
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR State House, Second Floor Indianapolis, Indiana 46204
CEASE & DESIST LETTER
Reveal
Attn: D. Victoria Baranetsky, General Counsel 1400 65th Street, Suite 200
Emeryville, California 94608 vbaranetsky@revealnews.org
Dear Reveal and Mr. Evans:
Eric J. Holcomb
Governor
November 29, 2019
Will Evans, Reporter
Reveal
1400 65th Street, Suite 200 Emeryville, California 94608 wevans@revealnews.org
On behalf of Indiana Governor Eric J. Holcomb, you are hereby directed to take action immediately to retract and correct all of the false and misleading statements in the article that you published entitled: Crippled backs, a crushing death: Investigation reveals cost of Amazon Prime for workers. Additionally, you must also cease and desist from publishing this article as currently written, take steps to retract it, and issue an apology to Governor Holcomb.
The tragic death of Amazon worker, Mr. Phillip Terry, should not have been exploited by this writer and published. Your source for the portion of the story applicable to the State of Indiana, Mr. John Stallone (an IOSHA Inspector), isn’t credible, something you could have ascertained before publishing it. Your story seeks to unjustifiably and inexcusably harm the good name and reputation of Governor Holcomb through false accusations.
Defamation of a public official, under Indiana law, can be established upon a showing of actual malice, meaning that the defendant either knew the statement was false or recklessly disregarded whether or not it was true. See Journal-Gazette Co. v. Bandido’s, Inc., 712 N.E.2d 446 (Ind. 1999). See also New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964).
Mr. Stallone made at least three misrepresentations that we know of, as follows:
Letter to Reveal and Will Evans Page 2
I note that you were told multiple times before you published the article, by both our office and the Indiana Department of Labor (“IDOLâ€), that this allegation was false, yet you published it anyway. These clear and unequivocal denials should have been red flags for you, causing you to prudently pause to re-evaluate whether Mr. Stallone was being truthful.
You have produced nothing else, as shown by your reporting, to support Mr. Stallone’s sensational claim. Before publishing your article, what probing questions, if any, did you ask Mr. Stallone in an effort to verify his claim? For example, did you ask Mr. Stallone to identify other IDOL employees who would have, or should have, seen Governor Holcomb at IDOL’s offices (where he claims this meeting occurred) so you could talk with them about this? When a high-profile, well-known figure like a governor of a state walks into a state government office, people notice and remember it. Did you ask Mr. Stallone to identify fellow employees or others that he told about this purported meeting so that you could talk with them in order to verify it? Mr. Stallone would be a truly rare person if he was pressured by a governor, as he alleged, and yet didn’t tell anyone else about it.
In addition, I note your article, when talking about the alleged meeting with Governor Holcomb, says that it occurred “[s]ome days after the conference call with Amazon officials.†Nowhere do you say precisely when this meeting supposedly occurred. You seem to have no problem citing precise dates for other key events in your story, but you don’t cite the time or date of the meeting in question. If Mr. Stallone did not, or could not, give you a precise time and date of that meeting, that is yet another red flag that should have caused you concern, as it is hard to believe anyone would forget exactly when such a remarkable meeting occurred. I note that our office has asked you for the specific time and date that Mr. Stallone claims this meeting occurred so we can further prove our denials by showing where Governor Holcomb was at that time (for example, the governor might have been giving a speech or been out of the State at the time), but all you’ve given us, in response, is a vague approximation of the time of the alleged meeting as being somewhere between November 20–December 6.
2. Mr. Stallone claims that he resigned. The truth is that he was fired for poor work performance that began long before the tragic death of Mr. Terry. Why is that important? Because it’s not unusual for people who have been fired to harbor ill will toward their former employers, and some even look for ways to get even. The fact that he was fired calls into question Mr. Stallone’s credibility, motivations and bias – something you apparently didn’texplore despite the red flags mentioned above. Had you investigated Mr. Stallone’s employment history and status with the State, either by asking him to provide you with his personnel file or requesting the publicly-available information about him from the Indiana State Personnel Department, you would have learned of his firing and could have taken that into proper consideration before publishing your article.
3. Mr. Stallone claims he wanted to issue eight safety citations. In conversations with the Indiana Department of Labor (“IDOLâ€) before publication of your article, you stated that Mr. Stallone claimed he wanted eight citations and received pushback from his superior over
Letter to Reveal and Will Evans Page 3
the number. Yet the documents provided to you by IDOL – which were handwritten by Mr. Stallone himself at the time he left the Amazon facility just two days after the death – show he listed only four citations. Those same four violations were actually filed against Amazon after the required internal review at IDOL. This discrepancy also casts further doubt on Mr. Stallone’s credibility.
4. Failure to explain the requirements of Indiana law. The law of our state requires the IDOL to confer and negotiate with businesses in order to resolve safety issues and violations. See Ind. Code ch. 22-8-1.1. Thus, contrary to the insinuation in your article that the call between Indiana’s OSHA Director and Amazon officials was suspect and out of the ordinary, the truth is that a review, which routinely includes conferring and negotiating with the business in question, was required under Indiana law. Clearly, this was something that your source, Mr. Stallone, knew as an IOSHA Inspector, and that can be easily ascertained by looking at Indiana law. But your reporting failed to discuss the requirements of Indiana law and how they apply to this case.
The allegations in your story about Governor Holcomb are completely and utterly false. Your source, Mr. Stallone, is not credible. Your story has serious inaccuracies and falsehoods.
In light of the foregoing, we hereby demand and direct that you take immediate action to retract and correct all the false and misleading statements in your article. Additionally, you must also cease and desist from publishing this article as currently written, take steps to retract it, and issue an apology to Governor Holcomb.
Your prompt attention to this matter is requested and required. Sincerely,
Joseph R. Heerens General Counsel
The University of Southern Indiana women’s basketball team took down the University of Tampa with a final score of 56-46 to open the 2019 Bellarmine Thanksgiving Classic Friday afternoon.
The Screaming Eagles (3-1) grabbed their third victory of the 2019-20 season on the back of senior guard Ashley Johnson‘s career-high-tying 19 points, five assists, a pair of steals and a block to share or outright lead USI in each of those categories. All nine active players for USI scored in the game, with Johnson and freshman forward Hannah Haithcock scoring in double-digits.
USI opened the contest with a 10-0 run that featured Johnson assisting on baskets from Haithcock, junior guard Emma DeHart and sophomore forward Ashlynn Brown before adding a three-pointer of her own. The first quarter closed with five different Eagles contributing on the scoreboard.
The Spartans returned the favor in the second frame, opening the quarter on an 11-2 run to take their first lead just before the midway media timeout. The Eagles rallied back to the 25-23 halftime score with buckets from Johnson, junior center Audrey Turner and freshman forward Tara Robbe.
From early-on in the second quarter through to the final minutes of the game, the Eagles and Spartans were within one possession of each other, trading leads back and forth. Johnson took over the game with nine of USI’s 16 points in the final six minutes, pushing the Eagles to their 56-46 final, representing the largest lead of either team in the game.
UE finishes season with 16 victories
 Down one of its best players, the University of Evansville volleyball team gave Illinois State everything it could handle, but came up just short on Thursday evening in the 2019 Missouri Valley Conference Volleyball Championships at the McLeod Center.
UE was led by Rachel Tam, who recorded 17 kills. The senior finishes her career with 1,469 kills in her career, third in program history. Alondra Vazquez had another nice match, adding another double-double with 10 kills and 19 digs. Gabriela Macedo added 23 digs in the match and finishes the 2019 season with 704. It is the 7th-best season in MVC history and she is just the seventh player to post 700 or more kills. She set the Evansville record last weekend. Allana McInnis added 22 assists and finished the year with 1,228. Her final total was the 4th-most in UE program history in a single season.
The first two points of the match belonged to the Aces and both were kills from Rachel Tam. ISU scored the next four points to take their first lead. UE matched its 2-point edge when a service ace by Cecilia Thon made it a 9-7 game. The turning point came when it was tied at 11-11. Illinois State posted the next six points and took the first set by a 25-21 final.
Gabriela Macedo posted a service ace in the opening moments of the second set and helped the Purple Aces open up a 3-1 lead. UE would add to its advantage as Vazquez recorded two kills and an ace to solidify a 13-6 lead. Evansville’s advantage held strong at 18-12 before ISU made another big rally, reeling of nine points in a row to take their first lead in the set since going up 1-0. The Aces closed within one on four occasions before Illinois State fended off the challenge, taking a 25-23 win and a 2-0 match lead.
Illinois State began the third frame by scoring the first six. Evansville countered by posting nine of the next 11 tallies to take their first lead at 9-8. Chloe Bontrager had a kill that got UE within a pair before Tam notched two in a row to put the Aces in front. Seven lead changes saw the teams battle to a 20-20 tie as Tam added another kill. That is when the Redbirds would take control, posting the last five points to take the 25-20 decision and clinch the match.
Happy Thanksgiving from everyone at the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office. We know our county and city residents are enjoying time with family and friends today, with many planning their holiday shopping strategy over turkey dinner. Sheriff Dave Wedding would like to remind everyone of a persistent issue in December, porch piracy!
Sheriff Wedding stated, “So called ‘porch pirates’ have struck in our county already this year and will undoubtedly continue their activity throughout the holidays. The explosion of internet based shopping has made this form of theft particularly lucrative during the weeks prior to Christmas.”
Porch pirates snatch packages from the front doors of homes and make off with the loot. Porch pirates have been known to follow UPS and FedEx trucks, grabbing packages soon after they are delivered.
How to defend against porch pirates:
According to the National Retail Federation, almost half of all shopping will be online this holiday season. With a few precautions, we can prevent these pirates from making off with our holiday treasure.
Image courtesy of Turner Entertainment Co.