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AG Curtis Hill Leads 18-State Effort To Resist Public-Nuisance Lawsuits

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Attorney General Curtis Hill argued in a brief filed this month that the cities of San Francisco and Oakland should not be able to use the common law of “public nuisance” to force five fossil fuel companies to pay for the harms the cities say the companies created by contributing to global climate change.

“The issues surrounding climate change and its effects — and the proper balance of regulatory and commercial activity — present political questions that cannot be resolved by judicial decree,” Attorney General Hill said. “Indeed, were the court to intervene here it would trample Congress’s carefully calibrated process of cooperative federalism, in which states work in tandem with the EPA to administer the federal Clean Air Act.”

Leading an 18-state coalition, Indiana filed its amicus brief on May 17. In the brief, Attorney General Hill urged the Ninth Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals to dismiss the lawsuit filed by the State of California on behalf of the two cities against the five named companies.

“States have an especially strong interest in this case because the list of potential defendants is limitless,” Attorney General Hill said. “As utility owners, power plant operators, and significant users of fossil fuels, states and their political subdivisions themselves may be future defendants in similar actions. Our amicus brief should send a loud message that the rest of the nation will not stand idle while California tries to become its own regulatory empire.”

ADOPT A PET

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Marie Curie is a female brown tabby. She was originally surrendered with her kittens, and spent several weeks in foster care with them. Now they’ve all been adopted and she is seeking a home of her own! Her adoption fee is $40 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

 

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Tax Court Remands for Revaluation of Shopping Center

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Katie Stancombe for www.theindianalawyer.com

Capitalization rates determined by the Indiana Board of Tax Review for an Anderson shopping center were found to be improper by the Indiana Tax Court and were thus reversed Wednesday.

In Madison County Assessor v. Sedd Realty Company, 18T-TA-12, the Madison County Assessor appealed the Board’s final determination that reduced the assessed value of Sedd Realty Company’s River Ridge shopping center for the 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012 assessment years.

The Assessor valued River Ridge at $12,469,000 for 2009; $11,778,110 for 2010; $11,968,600 for 2011; and $9,950,400 for 2012. Sedd argued the values were too high based on River Ridge’s more than 50 percent occupancy decline during the years at issue, as well as its status as a lower-tier shopping center.

The parties agreed the assessments were too high based on the latter fact and presented appraisals that valued River Ridge for each of the years at issue using the income and sales comparison approach, but not the cost approach.

David Hall of the Appraisal Institute prepared the assessor’s appraisal, concluding under the income approach that River Ridge’s net operating income was $998,718 for 2009; $968,610 for 2010; $966,428 for 2011; and $948,725 for 2012. He estimated the shopping center’s annual potential gross income and subtracted the vacancy and collection losses and total operating expenses to reach that conclusion.

In developing the capitalization rate, Hall averaged the rates from four selected retail sales, two surveys and an analysis using the band of investment method. He then loaded each year’s capitalization rate by 1.35 percent to account for Sedd’s share of the real estate tax expense and concluded that the capitalization rate was 11.25 percent for tax years 2009, 2011, and 2012 and 11.70 percent for 2010.

After applying his capitalization rates to the property’s net operating income, Hall added $100,000 to each year’s value to account for the property’s 39-acre tract of surplus floodplain land. He determined the appraised values of River Ridge were thus $8,980,000 for 2009; $8,380,000 for 2010; $8,690,000 for 2011; and $8,530,000 for 2012.

Jay Allardt, however, crafted the appraisals for Sedd by instead determining River Ridge’s net operating income using its actual income and expense information.

Allardt deducted River Ridge’s operating expenses from its income, adjusting and revising his initial appraisal conclusions to arrive at a net operating income of $950,000 for 2009; $890,000 for 2010; $830,000 for 2011; and $690,000 for 2012.

In concluding the capitalization rates, he identified 13 properties sold in Indiana and Ohio between 2001 and 2011 that consisted of manufacturing facilities, office buildings, and retail shopping centers with capitalization rates ranging from 10.90 percent to 16.26 percent.

Allardt chose a 14 percent overall capitalization rate for 2009 and 14.5 percent for 2010-2012 based on the rates of the market sales “that bracketed closer in size” to River Ridge and had similar occupancy levels.

Allardt ultimately applied capitalization rates ranging from 15.69 percent to 16.22 percent for resulting property values of $5,900,000 for 2009; $5,300,000 for 2010; $4,900,000 for 2011; and $4,100,000 for 2012.

The Board favored Hall’s approach and adopted his conclusions. But it offered misgivings about Hall’s market-extracted capitalization rates.

It thus took three retail properties from Allardt’s original comparable properties and arrived at 12 percent capitalization rate for all the years at issue. It then added Hall’s 1.35 percent load to its 12 percent and applied the resulting 13.35 percent to Hall’s net operating income conclusions.

The Board concluded that the proper value of River Ridge was $7,421,200 for 2009; $7,255,500 for 2010; $7,239,200 for 2011; and $7,106,600 for 2012. But the Indiana Tax Court reversed the final determination, finding the board’s capitalization rate was improper and that Allardt’s rate conclusion from the comparable properties was unreliable.

“The overall rates from Allardt’s three selected comparable properties ranged from 10.9% to 16.24%, but the Indiana Board did not choose the average of 12.94% or even the median of 11.7%,” Judge Martha Blood Wentworth wrote.

“Moreover, the Indiana Board never explained how it incorporated ‘the upper ends’ of the PwC survey data into its rate conclusion,” Wentworth continued. “Accordingly, the Court finds that the Indiana Board’s 12% capitalization rate is unsupported by any evidence and thus, arbitrary and capricious — little more than throwing a dart at a board.”

The tax court thus remanded with instructions for the Board to apply the capitalization rates stated in the Assessor’s appraisal, finding Hall’s rate conclusion to be the sole remaining probative evidence.

Indiana Files Opioid Suit Against Purdue Pharma, Sackler Family

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Katie Stancombe for www.theindianalwyer.com

The Indiana Attorney General’s Office on Tuesday announced a lawsuit against several owners and directors of pharmaceutical company Purdue Pharma, alleging those members of the Sackler family have played a key role in contributing to Indiana’s opioid epidemic.

Filed in Marion Superior Court, the complaint alleges that eight members of the Sackler family — who individually served as Purdue Pharma’s CEO, vice presidents and/or board directors — violated the Deceptive Consumer Sales Act, the Prescription Drug Discount and Benefit Card Statute, the False Claims Act and the Medicaid False Claims Act, among other unlawful activities.

“We believe the Sacklers’ wrongful acts have left a wake of addiction, death and devastation in Indiana and across the country,” said Attorney General Curtis Hill. “I hope this lawsuit serves notice to all that this office will continue to hold accountable companies and individuals who are engaging in abusive, deceptive, illegal and/or unfair conduct that causes harm to Indiana consumers.”

The 201-page complaint states that Indiana is seeking civil penalties, treble damages, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains, and restitution of sums constituting unjust enrichment from the Sackler family, with the latter being the lead claim in the case.

Specifically, it alleges that the family “shaped the company’s deceptive marketing strategies, received detailed reports on the implementation of those strategies, and continued to sanction this conduct” for years. From their positions as board members and high-ranking executive employees of Purdue, the complaint continues, the Sackler defendants therefore participated in, authorized, and directed such deceptive and unfair marketing activities.

The suit alleges that at the height of the opioid epidemic, from 2012-2016, “there were 58 Indiana counties with opioid prescribing rates greater than 100+ prescriptions per 100 residents. … These numbers have placed Indiana among the highest opioid prescription rates in the entire country.”

“Purdue Pharma’s conduct continued for at least a decade and the Sacklers continued to reap huge profits,” Hill said during a Tuesday press conference.

The complaint further alleges that the Sacklers enriched themselves by pocketing roughly $4 billion between 2007 and 2018 from Purdue’s OxyContin sales of more than $35 billion.

“The Sackler family and Purdue Pharma bear substantial responsibility for causing this crisis,” Hill said. “Now they must bear substantial responsibility to help fix it.”

The Tuesday complaint appears as round two of the AG office’s attack against Purdue Pharma, coming on the heels of a separate lawsuit filed against the company in November 2018. Following a two-year investigation, the AG’s office joined 27 other states in suing Purdue Pharma for allegedly intentionally understating the health risks of long-term opioid use.

Additionally, that lawsuit alleged the company, which manufactures the opioid-based pain medication OxyContin, deceptively marketed numerous drugs that violated Indiana law. The case remains pending in Marion Superior Court.

Hill said suing the Sackler family is another step toward holding those accountable who have committed wrongdoing. Assisting Hill’s office in the case are Washington, D.C., office of the firm Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC and the Minneapolis-based firm Zimmerman Reed LLP.

 

Vanderburgh County Redevelopment Commission Meeting and Presentation to Tax Increment Financing Allocation Area

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The Vanderburgh County Redevelopment Commission will hold a meeting on Thursday, May 30, 2019, at 9:00 a.m. in Room 307 of the Civic Center Complex at 1 N.W. Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard, Evansville, Indiana, and an annual presentation will be made to all taxing units that have territory in any of the Redevelopment Commission’s allocation areas.

INspire Idea competition now accepting applications

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Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch and the Indiana Office of Community and Rural Affairs are now accepting applications from Indiana Main Street organizations who have inspiring and imaginative downtown revitalization projects in their community.

“Indiana’s downtown spaces are the heart of the community, and by encouraging individuals to take stake in their quality of life, we will see a better outcome in the revitalization of these main streets,” Crouch said. “I look forward to seeing the finalists’ presentations and how they really took the guidelines and transformed them into ideas that will upgrade their area.”

The goal of the Main Street INspire Idea! competition is to encourage the Indiana Main Street network of communities and professionals to design creative projects for the benefit of their communities. The submitted projects should:

  • Connect to the community’s vision to create vibrant, people-centered places to live, work and invest;
  • Support at least one of the four key points Main Street programs have been using as a guiding framework for nearly 40 years: economic vitality, effective promotion, quality design and sustainable organization; and
  • Focus on highly visible changes, measuring progress and results that will demonstrate the revitalization effort is successful.

“We are excited to provide an opportunity to our Main Street organizations to continue to further revitalize their downtowns,” said Jodi Golden, Executive Director of OCRA. “We hope this competition will produce a spark that could lead to improved commercial vitality in rural downtown districts.”

Any active Indiana Main Street community is eligible for the two $5,000 minimum prizes, which will be distributed at the Great Lakes Main Street Conference. All submissions will be reviewed and five finalists will be announced on Friday, July 12, 2019. Finalists will receive two free conference registrations where they will present their projects during one of the sessions.

 

USI’s Leonhardt, Johnson earn All-America honor

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The D2CCA, which is voted on by the Division II College Sports Information Directors of America, recognized Leonhardt as a second-team honoree, while Johnson earned honorable mention laurels. Leonhardt also was named second-team NFCA All-America, while Johnson nabbed third-team NFCA All-America honors.

Leonhardt is earning an All-America honor for the third straight year and is collecting D2CCA and NFCA honors for the second time after earning third-team D2CCA accolades and second-team NFCA honors as a freshman in 2017. She also was second-team All-America by Fastpitch News as a sophomore in 2018.

The Great Lakes Valley Conference Pitcher of the Year as well as a first-team All-GLVC and All-Midwest Region honoree in 2019, Leonhardt finished the year with a 21-9 overall record, four saves, a GLVC-best 1.29 ERA, 243 strikeouts and a .187 opponent batting average.

Leonhardt tossed two complete-game shutouts in the NCAA II Midwest Region #1 Tournament, bringing her single-season total to a school-record tying 13 as well as her career mark to a school-record tying 33. She also holds the school record for career strikeouts (705) and wins (76).

Johnson is collecting NFCA and D2CCA All-America honors for the first time in her career after being named unanimous first-team All-GLVC and first-team All-Midwest Region earlier in the spring.

In 2019, Johnson finished the season with a team-best .363 batting average, 47 runs scored, five triples, 27 walks, .471 on-base percentage and .560 slugging percentage. She also had 11 doubles, four home runs, and was hit by a pitch a team-high 10 times.

She concluded her career ranked first all-time at USI in career walks (99) and was second in runs scored (155) and triples (16). Johnson became the 13th player in school history to reach 100 career RBIs and tied for 17th in career home runs (13).

USI finished the year with a 35-21 overall record and a 19-7 mark in GLVC play. The Screaming Eagles advanced to the NCAA II Midwest Region Tournament for the fifth straight year and the sixth time in seven seasons before falling to eventual Midwest Region champion Grand Valley State University in the championship round of the NCAA II Midwest Region #1 Tournament.

Southwest Indiana AHEC’s director to receive national award from Emergency Nurses Association

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Jane Friona, MHSA, executive director of Southwest Indiana Area Health Education Center (AHEC), has been named the recipient of the 2019 Behind the Scenes Award from the Emergency Nurses Association (ENA). This national award recognizes an individual who has made significant contributions to promote ENA’s mission of advocating for patient safety and excellence in emergency nursing practice. Friona will receive the award October 1, 2019, during the Emergency Nursing 2019 conference in Austin, Texas.

“As the executive director of the Southwest Indiana AHEC, Jane has an excellent understanding of rural health care in Indiana, as well as the professional development needs of health care professionals,” said Dr. Ann White, dean of the College of Nursing and Health Professions at the University of Southern Indiana, which serves as host for Southwest Indiana AHEC. “Under her leadership, USI’s annual Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE) training has expanded to ensure nurses working in rural and/or underserved communities in Indiana are offered the education and clinical trainings necessary to care for victims of sexual assault.”

Southwest Indiana AHEC has offered a five-day SANE course for the past four years at USI – an area of Indiana that had not hosted a training since 2006. Friona coordinated with the regional sexual assault response team (SART) to design the training, and volunteer instructors from the region include county prosecutors, Indiana State Police Crime Lab technicians, victim advocates, law enforcement, a forensic interviewer, and other content experts.

This collaboration provided the foundation for Friona and her team of community partners to apply for federal funding from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). In Fall 2018, Southwest Indiana AHEC received a three-year grant from HRSA worth more than $1 million to implement the Indiana SANE Training Project with the goal of expanding professional development opportunities for SANE nurses practicing in rural and/or underserved communities in Indiana. Friona, who wrote the bulk of the grant narrative and led the extensive application process, currently serves as the primary investigator for the Indiana SANE Training Project. As part of the project, nurses can apply for financial assistance for training, professional development opportunities and SANE certification and re-certification fees.

In December 2018, Friona received the statewide Behind the Scenes Award from the Indiana State Council of the ENA at its meeting in Indianapolis. Barbra A. Bachmeier, an advanced practice/forensic nurse from IU Health Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis, said Friona is deserving of both the state and national honors.

“Jane was instrumental in getting the HRSA grant, worth more than $1 million, for the state SANE project. This is huge for Indiana. What this means for nurses is that we are able to provide Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner training to any nurse in Indiana who wants to be a forensic nurse,” said Bachmeier. “This is a rural state, so there are areas in Indiana where you are unable to receive a medical forensic exam. Because of the grant, we have doubled the number of didactic and clinical trainings for nurses. Now, more patients do not have to travel for several hours to receive medical forensic exams after a sexual assault – they are able to receive care in their communities.”

Friona earned a bachelor’s degree in marketing from the University of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indiana, and a master of health services administration from Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona. She worked as a grant writer and special projects coordinator at USI for four years before taking the helm of Southwest Indiana AHEC in January 2012.