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Traffic Stop Nets Marijuana, Morphine Pills and over $3,600 Cash

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Knox County – This morning at approximately 3:20, Trooper Jordan Lee was patrolling in the Vincennes area when he stopped the driver of a 2002 Ford Ranger on Hart Street near 12th Street for having a defective license plate light. When Trooper Lee approached the vehicle he detected an odor of marijuana. The driver was identified as Demencio Canchola, 29, of Vincennes. A search of the vehicle revealed approximately 435 grams of marijuana, 10 morphine pills and over $3,600 cash. Canchola was arrested and taken to the Knox County Jail where he is currently being held on bond.

Arrested and Charges:

  • Demencio Canchola, 29, Vincennes, IN
  1. Dealing Marijuana, Class A Misdemeanor
  2. Maintaining a Common Nuisance, Level 6 Felony
  3. Possession of a Schedule II Controlled Substance, Level 6 Felony
  4. Possession of Marijuana, Class B Misdemeanor

OBITUARY OF RONALD HOYT NOE

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Obituary Of Ronald Hoyt Noe

by Koehler Funeral Homes Boonville and Chandler

Born on April 27, 1934, at Carr Creek, KY

Ronald H. Noe, 85 of Boonville, Indiana passed peacefully on Monday, April 29, 2019 in his home surrounded by his loving wife, three children, first grandchild and his daughter in law.

As a young man, Ron attended Dilce High School in Carr Creek, Kentucky. He married his lovely wife, Yvonne Cundiff Noe on October 20, 1957 in Western, KY.

Ron’s hobbies included: Bowling, Golfing, Fishing, Grilling, Mowing the Farm, Gardening and re-counting his amazing memories of life in the military and as a young man.

Ron was nothing short of an amazing and devoted husband, father, grandfather, great grandfather, boss, co-worker and friend.

He served in the US Navy from 1952-1956 as a Gunners Mate, sailing the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. He worked in the Pottery Industry for 40 plus years. His career led him to Rockport, Indiana where he was Plant Manager at the Peerless Pottery. He was respected and loved by all whom met him. His humble and loving approach to life is reflected in the images of his children and his lessons over time have molded their lives.

He is survived by his wife of 62 years, Yvonne; his son, Terry R. Noe (Lisa) of Boonville, IN; his daughter, Kimberly R. Embry (Randy) of Rockport IN; and son, R. Allan Noe (Kellie) also of Boonville, IN; 7 Grandchildren, Chasity Holbrook (Ryan); Brooklyn Stone (Scott); Michael Embry (Jess); Kelsie Beitel (Josh); Taylor Noe; Megan Sims (Cody); Jacob A. Hoyt Noe (Ashley); 7 Great Grandchildren, Kaleb and Matt Holbrook; Kenlie Young; Benjamin and Emily Stone; Delaney Beitel and Ryker Allan Hoyt Noe. Sister, Wilma York and Brothers, Everett JR and Glenn Noe.

Ron is preceded in death by his parents, Everett and Dana Noe of Eastern, KY; and his sister, Helen Ison of Lexington KY.

Visitation will be Friday, May 3, 2019 from 11-2pm at Koehler Funeral Home in Boonville, Indiana. The celebration of Ron’s life will be led by Pastors Walter Phillips and Steve Phipps and begins at 2pm. The burial will follow at Maple Grove Cemetery in Boonville, Indiana with the Warrick County Veterans Memorial Services to conduct military honors. The family lovingly invites you to South Side Baptist Church immediately after the burial for dinner.

The Family thanks you for the overwhelming amount of prayers, texts, messages and reminders of your love and support. We leave you with this, “We were lucky to have known and loved this man, his memory will live on in our hearts, forever.”

To send flowers to the family of Ronald Hoyt Noe, please visit Tribute Store.

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

“READERS FORUM” APRIL 30, 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.

HERE’S WHAT’S ON OUR MIND TODAY

 It has been well documented that the Weinzapfel Administration saddled the incoming Winnecke Administration with an unholy trilogy of unfinished business.   In a couple of days, we will re-publish some classic “IS IT TRUE” that will prove to be particularly on point on how many problems that former Mayor Weinzapfel created for Mr. Winnecke when he became Mayor of Evansville.  

WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays “Readers’ Poll” question is: Should City Council have known who’s paying the $3 million dollar costs to dismantle the dock at Marina Pointe before approving the move of the LST to the Tropicana area?
Please go to our link of our media partner Channel 44 News located in the upper right-hand corner of the City-County Observer so you can get the up-to-date news, weather, and sports.
If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com

Commentary: The Richard Lugar Who Walked Among Us

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Commentary: The Richard Lugar Who Walked Among Us

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – Richard Lugar had a sweet tooth.

His childhood friend Marianne Tobias told me a story.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

She and Lugar took piano lessons from the same piano teacher when they were young. The two did a recital together.

The refreshments included a plate of cookies. The cookies disappeared.

“He ate them all,” Tobias said, laughing. “I know he did.”

Another friend of Lugar’s, former U.S. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Georgia, told me a similar story. When Lugar and Nunn had formed their historic partnership to persuade the former Soviet Union to part with its weapons of mass destruction, they went to that dissolving nation as part of a delegation to tour a biological weapons facility. They inspected labs in which botulism, the bubonic plague and other horrors were produced.

They had to go there early in the morning, Nunn said. Because of that, everyone missed breakfast.

Their hosts knew that. That’s why, right in the middle of the death labs, there was a spread filled with pastries.

Wary of botulism and plague strains all around them, Nunn and most of the delegation opted not to eat.

Not Lugar.

“Dick dove right in,” Nunn chuckled.

Lugar himself once told me another story.

When he was a sports columnist for the student newspaper at Shortridge High School in the 1940s, he wrote a piece about how members of the basketball team were drinking. The drinking was affecting their play.

Lugar’s column enraged the basketball team and got him into hot water with the school principal.

But, Lugar said, the drinking stopped.

And the team got better.

Lugar’s high school classmate and friend, the author Dan Wakefield, told me the episode loomed larger in Lugar’s mind than it did with anyone else. Most people were shocked, Wakefield said, because “it was the only time he ever got in trouble.”

Still, Wakefield said, people admired Lugar’s courage for standing up for what he believed.

Years later, Wakefield said, he saw a similar scene acted out on a much larger stage.

By then, Lugar as a Republican U.S. senator from Indiana had gone to investigate whether corrupt and autocratic Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos, a close ally of the United States, had tried to steal an election from Corazon Aquino.

President Ronald Reagan, Lugar’s fellow Republican and a man Lugar admired, said Marcos had won the election.

Lugar disagreed. He said Reagan was mistaken – that Aquino had won. Marcos was trying to rob her and the Filipino people of the victory.

“Man, that took some guts,” Wakefield told me. “But, again, Dick stood up for what he believed.”

Richard Lugar died Sunday. He was 87.

Most of the tributes that have flowed since his death have focused on his huge, history-shaping achievements. The role he played in making the world a safer place. The 36 years he spent in the Senate, establishing himself as the most informed voice on foreign and agricultural policy. The eight years he labored as the transformational mayor of Indianapolis, the man who guided the city away from being a culturally and economically isolated backwater into being a regional powerhouse.

All these tributes are fair and deserved.

But the tendency with a man who accomplished as much as Richard Lugar is to view him as if he were a historical monument, not a flesh-and-blood human being.

This is particularly true in Lugar’s case because he was so disciplined in his expression. He was not a man to let his guard down with anyone but those closest to him.

But he also was not a monument.

That’s why in these early hours after his passing, I find myself thinking not of the Richard Lugar who will loom large in the history books, but of the Dick Lugar people told me about.

That Dick Lugar indulged a child’s craving for sweets even while he, as a grown and great man, battled to save thousands, even millions of lives. That Dick Lugar learned as a stripling what it meant to stand alone in defense of a principle and put the lesson to use decades later to remind both the good and the corrupt of what justice demanded.

That Dick Lugar walked our streets long before he strode the world’s stage.

He was one of us to the end.

May he rest in peace.

FOOTNOTE: John Krull is the director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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“LEFT JAB AND RIGHT JAB”

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“LEFT JAB AND RIGHT JAB”

VANDERBURGH COUNTY COUNCIL MEETING

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civic center

AGENDA Of VANDERBURGH COUNTY COUNCIL

MAY 1, 2019 At 3:30 P.M. in ROOM 301

  1. OPENING OF MEETING
  2. ATTENDANCE ROLL CALL
  3. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
  4. INVOCATION
  5. APPROVAL OF MINUTES:
    1. (A)  Personnel & Finance March 27, 2019
    2. (B)  County Council April 3, 2019
  6. PERSONNEL REQUESTS:

(A) SUPERIOR COURT

1. Request to fill vacancy for Probation Officer Supervisor and set appropriate stipend in Superior Court Supplemental Adult Probation

(B) PROSECUTOR
1. Request to fill the vacancy for Investigator

(C) PROSECUTOR – ADULT PROTECTIVE SERVICES

  1. Request to fill the vacancy for Investigator
  2. Request to fill a vacancy for Part-time Contractual position

(D) PROSECUTOR – STOP DOMESTIC VIOLENCE 1. Request to fill vacancy for Deputy Prosecutor

  1. (E)  ASSESSOR
    1. Request to fill the vacancy for Real Estate Deputy
    2. Request to fill the vacancy for Deputy Assessor Business Personal Property
  2. (F)  OLD NATIONAL EVENTS PLAZA

1. Request to fill the vacancy for Lead Man

(G) CUMULATIVE BRIDGE/COUNTY ENGINEER
1. Request to fill a vacancy for Assistant County Engineer

(H) HEALTH DEPARTMENT – SAFETY PIN

  1. Request to create and fill two Public Health Nurse positions
  2. Request to create and fill the Intake Coordinator position
  1. APPROPRIATION ORDINANCE:
    1. (A)  COMMISSIONERS
    2. (B)  JAIL
    3. (C)  OLD NATIONAL EVENTS PLAZA
  2. REPEAL: (A)
  3. TRANSFERS: (A) CLERK

(B) SUPERIOR COURT

  1. OLD BUSINESS: (A)
  2. NEW BUSINESS: (A)
  3. AMENDMENTS TO SALARY ORDINANCE:
    1. (A)  PROSECUTOR
    2. (B)  ASSESSOR (2)
    3. (C)  SUPERIOR COURT
    4. (D)  OLD NATIONAL EVENTS PLAZA (2)
    5. (E)  CUMULATIVE BRIDGE

(D) LOCAL ROADS & STREETS (E) HIGHWAY
(F) CIRCUIT COURT-SAP

(C) HIGHWAY
(D) SUPERIOR COURT-SAP

(F) SUPERIOR COURT-SAP (2) (G) PROSECUTOR-SDV
(H) PROSECUTOR-APS
(I) HEALTH DEPT-SAFETY PIN

  1. PUBLIC COMMENT
  2. REMINDER NEXT MEETING DATE/TIME: May 29, 2019 @ 3:30 p.m.
  3. ADJOURNMENT

Red denotes Personnel and Finance meeting

Blue denotes County Council meeting

PERSONNEL AND FINANCE MEETING APRIL 24, 2019
3:30 P.M.
ROOM 301

Students Have Received More Than $500k In ETFCU Scholarships

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Evansville Teachers Federal Credit Union is approaching $600,000 in awards granted through its Ted Hitch Scholarship program.

On April 28, 10 area high school seniors received $5,000 awards during a dinner at DoubleTree by Hilton in Evansville. The students, who attend nine different schools, were chosen from a competitive field of 99 applicants.

This year’s recipients, including a college of choice:

  • Brenden Bittner, Gibson Southern High School, University of Southern Indiana
  • Nate Flamion, Harrison High School, Purdue
  • Madisyn Grigsby, Central High School, Purdue
  • Andrew Heldman, Mater Dei High School, Indiana University
  • Jonathan Hueftle, Mount Vernon High School, Murray State
  • Brooklyn Knight, Apollo High School, Kentucky
  • Thomas Mishler, North High School, Indiana University
  • David Nickel, FJ Reitz High School, Purdue
  • Lucas Riggs, North High School, University of Evansville
  • Sophia Thompson, Reitz Memorial High School, Purdue

The scholarships are named in honor of Theodore “Ted” Hitch Jr., a longtime mathematics teacher at Bosse High School who championed education. Hitch served as manager/CEO of ETFCU for 28 years, from 1961-1989. He passed away in 2016.

Since the scholarships’ implementation in 1993, ETFCU has awarded $570,000 to 230 recipients. The award began with five $1,000 scholarships, increased to ten $2,000 scholarships in 2005, and increased again to ten $5,000 scholarships in 2015. 

To be eligible, either the applicant or the applicant’s parents/guardians must be a member of ETFCU. Applications are expected to have a minimum 3.75 unweighted grade point average on a 4.0 grading scale, and the rigorous process includes submission of SAT and/or ACT testing scores, financial need, letters of reference, extracurricular activities, and an essay.

Former Justice Selby To Hear AG Hill’s Discipline Case

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Supreme Court has appointed a former justice to oversee the disciplinary case against Attorney General Curtis Hill, rejecting Hill’s motion to forgo a hearing officer but also rejecting a Disciplinary Commission motion to appoint a three-person panel to hear the case.

Former Justice Myra Selby, now a partner at Ice Miller LLP, has been named the hearing officer in In the. Matter of: Curtis T. Hill, Jr., 19S-DI-156. Selby will now essentially act as the “trial judge” over the disciplinary matter, serving in place of the high court to manage pretrial discovery, oversee the public disciplinary hearing and issue findings of fact and conclusions of law that are referred to the five justices.

The Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission filed an ethics complaint against Hill on March 19, alleging he committed attorney misconduct by committing Class B misdemeanor battery and Level 6 felony sexual battery. The disciplinary charges stem from allegations that Hill drunkenly groped four women at a party in March 2018. A special prosecutor declined to criminally charge Hill.

The commission moved the Supreme Court to appoint a three-master panel to oversee Hill’s disciplinary case, a step generally only taken in judicial discipline actions. Hill, however, moved to decline a hearing officer entirely, saying the disciplinary action represented a judicial branch attempt to address a political issue better left to Indiana voters.

In court filings, Hill, through his attorney in the discipline case, former commission director Donald Lundberg, emphasized the fact that he was never formally charged for the alleged gropings. But the commission maintained that criminal charges are not a prerequisite to disciplinary charges and accused Hill of acting as if he were above lawyer ethics rules.

Among the ethics charges brought against Hill are allegations he violated Rules of Professional Conduct 8.4(b) by reflecting adversely on his honesty, trustworthiness or fitness as a lawyer; Rule 8.4(d) by engaging in conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice, and; Admission and Discipline Rule 22, which is the attorney’s oath, by engaging in offensive personality.

“The hearing officer is a director to qualify and assume jurisdiction,” the Supreme Court wrote in its Monday order. “Upon her acceptance of appointment, the hearing officer shall have the authority and affirmative duty to manage this case and bring it to the conclusion as expeditiously as possible.”

Selby served on the Indiana Supreme Court from 1995 to 1999, becoming both the first woman and the first black person to serve on the state’s high court. As a justice, she would have been involved in decisions as to whether attorneys should be sanctioned for alleged misconduct.

At Ice Miller, Selby now handes corporate internal investigations, appellate practice, compliance counseling, complex litigation, risk management and strategic and other legal advice, according to her Ice Miller profile. She is also a commercial mediator and arbitrator.

Though Selby will oversee the proceedings of Hill’s disciplinary case, the five justices will make the final decision on what, if any, sanctions should be imposed. Options include disbarment, suspension, censure or no discipline at all.

It’s unclear what impact any discipline imposed on Hill might have on his ability to serve as attorney general, which by statute requires the office holder to be an attorney in good standing. The AG has consistently denied the groping allegations and has resisted widespread calls for his resignation.