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“READERS FORUM” JULY 16, 2019

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We hope that today’s “READERS FORUM” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way.

WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays “Readers Poll’ question is:Do you feel that our local officials should have done a better job in scheduling public works projects in our area?

If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com

Footnote: City-County Observer Comment Policy. Be kind to people. Personal attacks or harassment will not be tolerated and shall be removed from our site.
We understand that sometimes people don’t always agree and discussions may become a little heated.  The use of offensive language and insults against commenters shall not be tolerated and will be removed from our site.
Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer, our media partners or advertisers

AG Hill Moves To Dismiss Sexual Harassment, Retaliation Lawsuit

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The dismissal motions were both filed in the Indiana Southern District Court on Thursday in Niki DaSilva, et al. v. State of Indiana and Curtis T. Hill, Jr., individually and in his official capacity as the Indiana Attorney General, 1:19-cv-2453. The case was filed last month by Democratic State Rep. Mara Candelaria Reardon and three legislative aides — Niki DaSilva, Samantha Lozano and Gabrielle McLemore.

The three women have alleged Hill drunkenly groped them at the 2018 end-of-session legislative party, held March 15 at A.J.’s Lounge in Indianapolis. Hill denies the accusations.

The complaint alleges sexual harassment, gender discrimination and retaliation at the hands of Hill and the state, which the three aides say is their employer. As relief for their claims — brought under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 United States Code §1983 and state law — the women are seeking damages and declaratory and injunctive relief, including either an apology from Hill or a retraction of allegedly defamatory statements.

But in urging Judge James Sweeney to dismiss the “sprawling, eleven-count complaint,” Hill alleges the claims fail for subject-matter jurisdiction and/or fails to state a claim for relief.

In an 18-page motion to dismiss filed on behalf of Hill in his official capacity and the state, the AG argues DaSilva, Lozano and McLemore are not entitled to relief under Title VII because the state is not their “employer.” Reardon was not included on the Title VII claims.

Instead, Hill argues the legislative aides are excepted from Title VII coverage as persons “chosen by (elected officials) to be on such officer’s personal staff, or an appointee on the policy making level or an immediate adviser with respect to the exercise of the constitutional or legal powers of the office.” DaSilva is a legislative assistant for the Indiana Senate Republican Caucus, Lozano is a legislative assistant for three House Democrats, including Reardon, and McLemore is the communications director of the Indiana Senate Democrats.

“All three Plaintiffs — Ms. Lozano, in particular — could be ‘personal staff of legislators,’” the dismissal motion reads, citing to a six-factor test found in Lockwood v. McMillan, 237 F. Supp. 3d 840, 857 (S.D. Ind. 2017). “… Although the details in the complaint are sparse, Legislative Assistants and Communication Directors fit the conventional mold of personal staff, as indicated by these factors.”

The motion also argues the three women are not “employees” of the state, as is required by Title VII, under an exclusion from the State Civil Service System found in Indiana Code § 4-15-2.2-1(b)(1).

Because of the Title VII exceptions, Hill argues the three women should have sought relief under the Government Employee Rights Act of 1991, which he said affords excepted plaintiffs “administrative-type proceedings, more akin to the type of proceedings provided by the Administrative Procedures Act … .”

“Specifically, plaintiffs must file a GERA complaint with the EEOC, the EEOC will issue a final order, and plaintiffs may seek appeal of an adverse administrative decision to a federal court of appeals,” the motion says. The women did file a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, but it was voluntarily dismissed.

“Since ‘the courts of appeals, rather than the district courts, have exclusive jurisdiction to review final orders from the EEOC on GERA claims,’ but Plaintiffs improperly filed suit in this Court, Counts I and II must be dismissed as this Court lacks jurisdiction to hear them,” the AG wrote.

As to the claims brought under Section 1983 — which allege violations of the women’s First and Fourteenth Amendment rights — Hill argues the state is entitled to sovereign immunity. Further, “retaliation” is not a cognizable claim under the Equal Protection Clause, he argues, so that Section 1983 claim fails for that reason, as well.

Turning to the official capacity claims against Hill, specifically the request for an apology or retraction of allegedly defamatory statements, the Attorney General’s office argues retractions are not a recognized form of injunctive relief.

“The only relief allowed under an official-capacity suit is prospective injunctive relief,” the AG argues. “… An apology, however, is ‘an acknowledgement of past wrongdoing …, something [federal courts are] without authority to order.’”

Turning to the claims against Hill in his individual capacity, the AG wrote in his second motion to dismiss that his purported sexual misconduct did not occur while he was acting “under color of state law,” so the Section 1983 claims fail. Additionally, Hill argues that there was no equal protection violation because he is not the women’s employer.

“(Hill’s) activities in the crowded bar can hardly be characterized as the ‘misuse of power’ conferred by ‘state law,’” Hill wrote. “They were not in furtherance of any duty, obligation or power he possesses as Indiana Attorney General. If believed, the allegations focus on the activities of a partygoer late at night, which is the type of behavior that occurs in bars after midnight.”

What’s more, Hill said his alleged misconduct does not “shock the conscience” in a way that would rise to the level of a substantive due process violation.

“On the contrary, if the plaintiffs’ allegations are given credence, the conduct is at worst the type of behavior which can be exhibited by patrons at a crowded bar late at night,” he wrote. “The complaint is devoid of allegations of sustained prolonged physical contact or multiple episodes perpetrated on the same plaintiff. There was no force applied, no overt sexual contact, no insults or belittling remarks.”

Hill also argues he is protected by qualified immunity, citing to the recent decision in Doe v. Purdue Univ., No. 17-3565, 2019 WL 2707502 (7th Cir. June 28, 2019).

Turning to the state law claims, Hill argued sexual battery is not a recognized tort action in Indiana, while the defamation and false light invasion of privacy claims fail under absolute and prosecutorial immunity.

“Where, as here, the conduct alleged to constitute retaliation does not rise to the level of threat, coercion, intimidation, or profound humiliation, ‘the First Amendment gives wide berth for vigorous debate, and especially for statements by public officials,’” the motion to dismiss says.

While the motion to dismiss on behalf of the state and Hill in his official capacity was drafted by attorneys with the Office of the Attorney General, the motion filed on behalf of Hill individually was written by private attorneys with the firm of Eichhorn & Eichhorn, LLP, which has offices in Indianapolis, northwest Indiana and the South Bend/Mishawaka area.

Hill’s office had initially released a statement saying OAG attorneys would handle the case. Eichhorn & Eichhorn attorneys filed their notices of appearance late last week.

 Man Pulls Knife On Deputy Outside Of Courthouse

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 Man Pulls Knife On Deputy Outside Of Courthouse

A Bloomington man is in custody today after threatening a deputy with a knife and attempting to grab another deputy’s Taser.

The incident began just before noon when a deputy assigned to the Vanderburgh County Courts Building responded to a report of a vehicle parked on the sidewalk near the north steps of the Evansville Teachers Federal Credit Union Plaza Building. Finding no one inside the vehicle, the deputy went inside the plaza building to check for the owner. The deputy located the owner, who later identified himself as Mr. Abraham Loganray. Mr. Loganray admitted to being the owner of the vehicle, but quickly exited the building despite the deputy asking him to stop.

The deputy followed Mr. Loganray outside and once again ordered him to stop. Mr. Loganray then produced a flashlight, which he shined into the deputy’s eyes. He then removed a folding knife from his pocket, which he opened and began waving around. The deputy pointed his service pistol at Mr. Loganray and ordered him to drop the knife. Mr. Loganray then closed the knife and entered his vehicle. The deputy then attempted to remove Mr. Loganray from the vehicle as he started the engine. Additional deputies arrived to assist. During the struggle, Mr. Loganray grabbed a deputy’s Taser and attempted to remove it from a retention holster. Mr. Logan struggled during the arrest, refusing to be handcuffed and forcefully preventing his hands from being placed behind his back. Mr. Loganray was eventually overpowered and was able to be handcuffed without further incident. Mr. Loganray sustained minor abrasions and contusions as a result of the struggle.

Mr. Loganray (who is also known as Mr. Charles Logan Ray) remains lodged in the Vanderburgh County Jail with no bond yet set.

ARRESTED:

Abraham Loganray (aka: Charles Logan Ray), 26, of Bloomington. Disarming a Law Enforcement Officer as a Level 5 Felony, Intimidation with a Deadly Weapon as a Level 5 Felony, Resisting Law Enforcement as a Level 6 Felony, Disorderly Conduct as a Class B Misdemeanor

FOOTNOTE: 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.

 

Rachel Tam Playing For Native Hong Kong This Week

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Senior Enjoying The Opportunity To Compete Over The Summer

 Looking to be at her best in her final collegiate season, University of Evansville senior volleyball player Rachel Tam is playing for her native Hong Kong in the 2019 Asian Women’s U23 Volleyball Championship.  The host city for the championships is Hanoi, Vietnam.

“It is absolutely wonderful being able to represent Hong Kong,” Tam said.  “Having the opportunity to play my old teammates, I’m really grateful. I cherish every moment playing with them.”

Action in the tournament began on July 13 and runs through the 21st.  Tam and her squad have enjoyed a solid start, opening with a 3-0 sweep of Sri Lanka.  Her squad followed a 3-0 loss to Kazakhstan up with a 3-0 win over Macau on Monday.

“I think this tournament can help me prepare my “game day mindset” and practice consistency,” Tam explained.

The tournament features 14 countries and regions.  Hong Kong is in Group D and has already faced the other three squads in the group (Sri Lanka, Kazakhstan, Macau).  Tam played in the same tournament in 2017, helping the team to a 6th place finish.  She is motivated to help her team to a better finish in 2019 and also hopes the experience translates to her senior season with the Purple Aces.

“We have been practicing hard since preseason,” she exclaimed.  “With the experience we had from last season and the input of talented freshmen class, we are looking to get into the MVC tournament.”

Tam is coming off of an excellent junior season that saw her rank second in the MVC with 4.21 kills per set on her way to a spot on the All-Missouri Valley Conference Second Team.

INspire Idea Competition Selects Five Finalists

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Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch and the Indiana Office of Community and Rural Affairs announced five Indiana Main Street organizations as finalists for the INspire Idea competition.

“I am excited to see what these five organizations present at the conference in the coming months,” Crouch said. “It is always inspiring to see the original ideas communities come up with to highlight the uniqueness of their area.”

The goal of the competition is to encourage the Indiana Main Street network of communities and professionals to design creative projects for the benefit of their communities. After a thorough review, the following Main Street communities have been chosen as finalists:

  • Culver Main Street;
  • Greenfield Main Street;
  • Greater Lafayette Commerce;
  • Heart of Sullivan; and
  • LaPorte Economic Advancement Partnership.

“We are excited that our Indiana Main Streets were creative with this competition,” said Jodi Golden, Executive Director of OCRA. “By requiring no local match, we hope this competition will produce a spark that could lead to improved commercial vitality in rural downtown districts.”

Golden said each applicant had an imaginative downtown revitalization project in their community. These finalists are competing for one of two $5,000 grants, which will be awarded at the Great Lakes Main Street Conference. Each finalist will receive two free conference registrations where they will present their projects during one of the sessions.

Registrations are still being accepted for the conference. For more information, visit www.in.gov/ocra/2956.htm.

USI College of Nursing and Health Professions Receives $5.4 Million In Federal Grants

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USI College of Nursing and Health Professions Receives $5.4 Million In Federal Grants

The University of Southern Indiana’s College of Nursing and Health Professions has landed just under $5.4 million in competitive federal funding to improve health outcomes for underserved populations in southwestern Indiana. USI received two new grants from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services: a $3.7 million grant to implement the Geriatrics Workforce Enhancement Program (GWEP), and a $1.7 million grant to develop a nurse practitioner residency program serving underserved communities.

“From June 2018 to June 2019, the College of Nursing and Health Professions has had four HRSA grants funded for a total of $8,466,739,” said Dr. Ann White, dean of USI’s College of Nursing and Health Professions. “These newest grants will help us continue to expand partnerships and strengthen the relationships between academia, primary care sites and health systems to improve health outcomes in southwestern Indiana.”

Geriatrics Workforce Enhancement Program (GWEP) ($3.7 million)

The purpose of this project is to improve health outcomes for older adults in underserved communities of southwest Indiana by developing a workforce to maximize patient and family engagement and integrate geriatrics into primary care. To implement the five-year project, USI will be working with three Deaconess primary care clinics, the Deaconess Family Medicine Residency Program, and two Area Agencies on Aging (SWIRCA & More and Generations).

The project is under the direction of Dr. Katie Ehlman, associate professor of gerontology and director of the USI Center for Healthy Aging and Wellness.

“This project is based on innovative partnerships with the goal of improving health outcomes for older adults,” she said. “The GWEP provides resources to increase the number and quality of health care professionals who are skilled, not only in geriatric and primary care, but also in collaborative problem-solving and how to more effectively use community resources to support older adults and their caregivers.”

During the grant project, Area Agency on Aging case managers will be embedded in three Deaconess primary care clinics, connecting primary care with social service sectors in order to improve health outcomes for elders.

“Our care managers will be in a position to offer education and resources for both patients and health care providers,” said Jillian Hall, director of Employee Relations and Special Projects at SWIRCA & More, an Area Agency on Aging in Evansville, Indiana. “Some of the areas we hope to positively impact include dementia care, opioid misuse, advance care planning, diabetes management, fall risk assessment and more.”

Dr. Lisa Phifer, assistant director of the Deaconess Family Medicine Residency Program, described the project as a unique collaboration. “This project will prepare family medicine residents and an interprofessional team of future health professionals to provide comprehensive, quality care to older adults,” she said. “We are excited to be a part of this project that will help our primary care settings to become more age-friendly.”

Laura Holscher executive director with Generations, an Area Agency on Aging based in Vincennes, Indiana, agreed that integrating case managers at the primary care clinics will increase access to a variety of community-based programs. “This integration will offer opportunities for training with evidence-based programs including A Matter of Balance®, Chronic Disease Self-Management and Diabetes Self-Management programs in order to improve health outcomes for older adults in southwest Indiana. These programs will target at-risk individuals living in rural areas and address factors that encourage healthy aging,” she said.

The GWEP will draw on the expertise of three internationally-known experts serving as consultants: Dr. Rebecca Sudore, professor of medicine in the University of California, San Francisco Division of Geriatrics, staff physician at the UCSF-affiliated San Francisco Veterans Affairs Health Care System, and creator of the PREPARE for Your Care advance care planning program; Dr. Bill Thomas, geriatrician and innovator with a quarter century of experience with creating and replicating new approaches to health and well-being; and Teepa Snow, occupational therapist and renowned dementia-care educator who is the owner and CEO of Positive Approach, LLC.

For more information about this project, visit USI.edu/GWEP.

NEW HARMONY FOOD PANTRY IN DANGER OF CLOSING!

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 By Dan Barton, Publisher Of New Harmony Gazette

Jesus said, according to what is written in 1 John 3:17, “ If anyone has the world’s goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does God’s love abide in him?”

One morning in early July as I was peddling to my office at 505 Main Street, I noticed a small gathering of people at the back door of the First Baptist Church in New Harmony. I decided to pull over and inquire as to what was going on. It was not Sunday. Right away I recognized some of the faces in the small gathering. Several were members of the New Harmony Kiwanis Club, as am I, but also others who have been helpful as volunteers in our town many times during our occasions of need.

I was told that they were awaiting the arrival of a delivery truck from the Tri-State Food Bank. They would be unloading the food supplies on this Wednesday morning in July, to be stored in the basement of the church for the next time that they would open their doors to the poor, who needed food, in our community. I was also told that the New Harmony Food Pantry was searching for a new location in which to serve the less fortunate who come to them for assistance each month. They will need another facility, preferably all on one floor, without stairs or steps. This, so that those who help out in unloading the truck, and eventually moving the containers into the grocery area, would not have to be continually climbing and carrying the heavy, bulky items up and down stairs. At the same time, I was told, the Director of the New Harmony Food Pantry was also going to retire and they needed someone to replace her. Both the closing of their current building to them and the need for the new director would have to take place by the end of 2019.

I was astonished, to say the least. That’s a pretty tall order to fill in a small town like ours in just five or six months. They wanted to know if I would help out by running an appeal in The New Harmony Gazette. “Sure!” I said. That’s the least I could do. “Who is the current director of the New Harmony Food Pantry?” I asked. I was told that it was Mary Ellen Gerard. I had never met Ms. Gerard but asked if I could speak to her. She came to the basement entrance and motioned me downstairs. The truck then arrived and the food was offloaded by the volunteers onto a manual roller type conveyer that took it into the basement. There, they began carrying and stacking the boxes in the appropriate locations.

When I went downstairs I was met by Mary Ellen. I noticed that there were even more familiar faces from Kiwanis, along with Mary Ellen’s husband, Gary Gerard, who was on hand. The two of us went up another flight of stairs into the grocery area and Ms. Gerard began to explain their dilemma.

Mary Ellen Girard has been a part of delivering food to the poor and the needy in New Harmony, as well as in our immediate surrounding area, since about 1991, when the operation started. Initially, she told me, it was a small operation, only items such as crackers, peanut butter, powdered milk and cheese. It started in a building across the street from, and was supported by, St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church. Eventually, in 1993, the New Harmony Ministry Association was established by the seven Churches in New Harmony to serve those in need in Posey County from one central location. The organization at that time ran two programs; a living assistance program to help folks with rent or utilities, and the Food Pantry. The Food Pantry program is funded by the New Harmony Churches as well as other Churches in the area; the United Way of Posey County, individuals, businesses, organizations and foundations. If the New Harmony Food Pantry continues in operation after the end of December of this year, the

Ministry Association will continue to oversee the Food Pantry under the new leadership. New Harmony Food Pantry has been located at the First Baptist Church for over the twenty years.

Today the operation is quite large. Mary Ellen said that around 60 local farmers help them in their efforts by each one planting an acre of crops that is set aside to assist the Food Pantry. The farmers then raise cows and pigs to have processed at DeWigs into ground beef and sausage. It supplies the Pantry with up to 700 pounds of meat for distribution to the poor about three or four times a year. The New Harmony Food Pantry is open to the public every third Thursday of each month from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

This is a vital service to the people of our community. It can only be imagined how much good this Pantry, and the folks who have dedicated themselves to it’s operation, have done over its many years of service.

Right now, they are asking for your help in return for the almost 30 years that they have served New Harmony. Hopefully, someone, or some organization, is willing to step forward and fulfill their needs; a new Food Pantry facility and a person who can take over as its Director when Mary Ellen retires. This is an unpaid, volunteer position. Mary Ellen Girard said to me that she will not simply abandon the new Director but will act as a consultant to ease the new Director’s transition into her old job. To reach Mary Ellen Girard, if you are interested in either becoming the Food Pantry Director, or if you know of, or have a facility that can be used by them, call her at 812-682-4077.

Ms. Girard added that she would like to thank the First Baptist Church for providing the New Harmony Food Pantry with a wonderful location to run it’s operations for over twenty years. She would also like to thank, she said, the Ministry Association and all of the volunteers who have worked so diligently in this effort and for their support during those years.

Divided COA Upholds Drug, Firearm Convictions, Can’t Solve Gun ‘Conundrum’

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

Though the warrantless search that led to a man’s drug- and firearm-related convictions was lawful, a divided panel of the Indiana Court of Appeals was stumped on how to resolve the “conundrum” of when or if the man’s gun can be returned to him.

In Darnell Cleveland v. State of Indiana, 18A-CR-2298, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Officers Eric Parrish and Nickolas Smith stopped a Ford Explorer after observing the vehicle speeding and learning the license plate number was registered to a Chevrolet. As the officers approached the vehicle, they smelled raw marijuana.

While searching the vehicle’s driver — who had an outstanding warrant — for weapons, Smith saw passenger Darnell Cleveland walking away with a gold bag. Cleveland complied with an order to drop the bag, which Smith later opened and found a handgun and two baggies of marijuana.

Cleveland admitted the gun was his and said he knew about the marijuana, but claimed he had “nothing to do with” the drugs. He was later charged with one count of carrying a handgun without a license and one count of possession of marijuana, both as Class A misdemeanors.

At his trial, Cleveland objected to the admission of the marijuana and gun, arguing the evidence was obtained from an unconstitutional search. He argued later that the state lacked probable cause to arrest him, but the Marion Superior Court overruled both objections and found him guilty as charged.

Cleveland was sentenced to an aggregate 365 days, all suspended, and was ordered to pay a $50 public defender fee. The trial judge also ordered that his gun be destroyed.

The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld Cleveland’s convictions on Monday, with Judge John Baker writing that the automobile exception to the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against warrantless searches extended to the gold bag because the bag was inside the vehicle when officers initially believed the vehicle contained contraband.

“The probable cause to stop and search the vehicle and its contents was established from the beginning, and said probable cause did not cease the moment Cleveland exited the vehicle and walked away,” Baker wrote. “If this were the case, passengers — even those as compliant, respectful, and non-violent as Cleveland — would have license to abscond with contraband from police presence to avoid any possibility of arrest for themselves or for those still inside the vehicle.”

The search was also lawful under the Indiana Constitution, Baker said, because the smell of marijuana emanating from the car and the discrepancy in the license plate’s registration created a “strong suspicion” of illegal activity. Further, Cleveland had already been detained as part of the initial stop, and the officers had authority to defuse the “precarious situation” when Cleveland began to walk away.

The appellate court likewise upheld the $50 public defender fee, imposed against Cleveland without an indigency hearing, noting Indiana Code section 35-33-7-6(c) does not require a hearing. Further, though the judge did not make an explicit indigency finding, the panel said the record reveals that “(t)he trial court did its due diligence by inquiring into Cleveland’s financial abilities and making an implicit finding about Cleveland’s indigency status.” But in a footnote, the court said it’s best practice to make explicit indigency findings.

But Cleveland did secure a partial victory when the appellate court found error in the trial court’s order for Cleveland’s gun to be destroyed. Relying on Trice v. State, 114 N.E. 3d 496, 501 (Ind. Ct. App. 2018), Baker said the “misuse of firearms” that allows for guns to be withheld post-conviction, as contemplated in Indiana Code § 35-47-3-2(b), does not include “mere possession.”

Even so, the appellate panel stopped short of ordering the return of Cleveland’s gun, noting he is still not licensed to carry the weapon, “and the trial court does not have the authority to return the firearm directly to Cleveland.”

“As of now, given our lack of statutory guidance, we order that the IMPD must withhold Cleveland’s firearm until a proper solution becomes available,” Baker said. “This is a conundrum that only our General Assembly can resolve.”

The case was remanded.

Judge Cale Bradford dissented in part from the majority opinion, in which Baker was joined by Judge Margret Robb. Bradford’s dissent focused on the issue of the handgun, with the dissenting judge writing that the reasoning of Trice is “unpersuasive.”

Noting Cleveland told law enforcement he was carrying the weapon for protection, Bradford said the defendant was “’using’ the handgun for self-defense by carrying it with him.”

“This use becomes misuse, however, when the person is not legally entitled to carry that handgun,” he said. “I conclude that the authorities were well within their rights to seize and destroy Cleveland’s handgun.”

Bradford further wrote that the decisions in Nicoson v. State, 938 N.E.2d, 660 (Ind. 2010), and Mickens v. State, 742 N.E.2d 927 (Ind. 2001) – which the Trice court relied on – are not applicable here. Thus, he would affirm the trial court in all respects.

LEFT JAB AND RIGHT JAB” JULY 16, 2019

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“LEFT JAB AND RIGHT JAB”

“Right Jab And Left Jab” was created because we have two commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE” or “Readers Forum” columns concerning National or International issues.
Joe Biden and Ronald Reagan’s comments are mostly about issues of national interest.  The majority of our “IS IT TRUE” columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give Mr. Biden and Mr. Reagan exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT 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 “RIGHT JAB” several times a week.  Oh, “Left Jab” is a liberal view and the “Right Jab is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments of the two gentlemen is free to do so.

FOOTNOTE: Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.

Gov. Holcomb Public Schedule for July 16

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Below find Gov. Eric J. Holcomb’s public schedule for July 16, 2019.

 

Tuesday, July 16: Governor’s Awards Reception at the Indiana Black Expo

WHO:              Gov. Holcomb
Gregory Wilson, Executive Director, Indiana Civil Rights Commission
Tanya Bell, President and CEO, Indiana Black Expo, Inc.

 

WHAT:            The governor will give remarks and present awards.

 

WHEN:            2 p.m., Tuesday, July 16

 

WHERE:          Indiana Convention Center

500 Ballroom
100 S. Capitol Ave.

Indianapolis, IN 46225