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Three Evansville Men Arrested for Late Night Robbery

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The Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office has arrested three Evansville men for their alleged involvement in a late night robbery that occurred just before midnight on April 19th, 2019. At 11:30 PM on Friday evening, Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s deputies were dispatched to a residence in the 1900 block of Wolverine Drive as a victim reported to have been robbed. The victim reported that several known male suspects pushed their way into the residence and assaulted her before fleeing in a vehicle with some of her belongings.

Sheriff’s deputies later located the vehicle in the area of Lafayette Avenue and Richardt Avenue and were able to take two of the three suspects into custody at that time. One of the suspects, Aaron Lester, chose to fight with the deputies who were attempting to lawfully arrest him and was additionally charged for resisting arrest. The second suspect, Skylar Dillard, was arrested without incident and both were taken to the Vanderburgh County Jail where they were housed for multiple charges stemming from the robbery. Deputies located the stolen items inside of the vehicle during the road side stop. During the investigation deputies determined that the third suspect, Tyrone Clay, had already been dropped off at his residence on Evansville’s southeast side.

Deputies went to Clay’s residence and observed him through an open window. Clay was given numerous warnings to exit the residence, but refused to comply with the deputies’ orders. Due to his refusal to peacefully surrender, a Sheriff’ Office K-9 was used to apprehend Clay. Clay was treated for minor injuries and was transported to the jail after his release from the hospital.

Dillard, Lester and Clay were booked into the jail for charges stemming from the robbery. All three individuals were charged for being in possession of narcotics at the time of their arrests. Lester and Clay were also charged for resisting law enforcement.

Imaged Above: Aaron Lester, 23, of Evansville, IN

Imaged Above: Tyrone Clay, 31, of Evansville, IN

Imaged Above: Skylar Dillard, 24, of Evansville, IN

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.

 

“READERS FORUM” APRIL 21, 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

Over several years, government watchdog groups have expressed concerns that changes made to casino gaming laws were seemingly motivated by donations to the right political persons or political groups.  We wonder why one of these governmental watchdog groups hasn’t asked the proper law enforcement authorities to look into any possible wrongdoing by anyone involved in the writing of the recently approved casino legislation.

The only local State Representative who voted against the controversial gaming bill was Ryan Hatfield (D) from Evansville.
Oh, please take time and read the new “LEFT JAB, RIGHT JAB” article, sit back, and watch CCO posters Ronald Reagan and Joe Biden intellectually slug it out on national issues that might interest you.
WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?
Todays “Readers’ Poll” question is: Do you feel that some influence peddling was involved in the passing of the new Casino law?
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

Lawmakers Face $100 Million Shortfall in Two-Year Budget

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Lawmakers Face $100 Million Shortfall in Two-Year Budget

By Emily Ketterer
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—Indiana lawmakers have about one week to cut nearly $100 million from the proposed state budget.

The general revenue forecast revealed Wednesday predicted the state will collect $34 million less over the next two fiscal years, and Medicaid is expected to need more than $60 million in additional funding than originally expected.  in the state budget.

But lead budget writers in the House and Senate said they were confident that the cuts they will need to make to the two-year $34.6 billion spending plan won’t hurt Hoosiers.

“There was nothing in the reports that gave me tremendous pause,” said Rep. Todd Huston, R-Fishers, co-chair of the House Ways and Means Committee.

Huston and Sen. Ryan Mishler, R-Bremen, chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said even with $100 million less, their top priorities remain K-12 education, the Department of Child Services and Medicaid as they revise the budget over the next few days.

“We can work it out,” Huston said.

The Senate’s version of the budget left $2.2 billion in reserves, nearly a $300 million increase from the House’s $1.9 million. Mishler said he was cautious when drafting the Senate’s budget in preparation for the upcoming forecast.

“When we did our budget, I padded it pretty heavy in case this happened,” Mishler said. “I don’t want to go back and say, ‘Hey, we’re going to start taking away, but say, we have extra, let’s use it.’”

But the leaders said there are so many pieces within a budget, they can’t just make the single decision to cut from the reserves.

“This does change things,” Mishler said. “We have to sit down and see the priorities of the caucuses and administration and see what we’re willing to cut out.”

The state is expected to collect roughly $240 million less in individual state income taxes, partially due to the 34-day federal government shut down where government employees did not get paid, David Reynolds, state fiscal analyst, said. However, Hoosier wages still continue to grow every year, said Jason Dudich, state budget director.

On the other side, the state is projected to take in more revenue from corporate taxes even though the tax rate continues to decline. That is because manufacturing companies and other industries continue to do well.

One big change that affected revenue projections came in the forecast for Medicaid, the state-funded health care program for low-income Hoosiers. The budget was up by about $60 million because of new projects to treat 9,000 people for Hepatitis C in each of the next two years.

“We’re starting to understand more about where Hepatitis C stands across the state,” said Dr. Jennifer Walthall, secretary of the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration. “And we used that information to project our treatment needs.”

Mishler said he believes Indiana is “one budget away from recession.” But the economic experts expressed little concern for a recession in the near future.

“We don’t forecast a recession. There’s probably more bridge in the forecast to the downside more than the upside, but that’s pretty normal in this stage of the economic cycle,” said economist Tom Jackson of IHS Markit. He presented an overview of Indiana’s economic trends through the two-year budget cycle.

Jackson said a red flag sign for a recession is a drop in the manufacturing sector, which he said could have the most financial impact on Indiana because those are higher-paying job.  However, that sector continues to grow right now.

The House and Senate will review and make changes to create a final budget within the next week. Leaders in both chambers hope to be finished by April 24.

Emily Ketterer is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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Indiana Ranking For Children’s Health Care

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Indiana Ranking For Children’s Health Care

With Every Kid Healthy Week kicking off on April 22nd and children’s health care costs getting increasingly more expensive, the personal finance website WalletHub released its report on 2019’s Best and the Worst States for Children’s Health Care.

WalletHub compared the 50 states and the District of Columbia across 33 key metrics.  According to the report, the data set ranges from share of children aged 0 to 17 in excellent or very good health to pediatricians and family doctors per capita.

Children’s Health Care in Indiana (1=Best; 25=Avg.):
27th – % of Children in Excellent/Very Good Health
40th – % of Uninsured Children
44th – Infant-Death Rate
48th – % of Children with Unaffordable Medical Bills
44th – Pediatricians & Family Doctors per Capita
36th – % of Obese Children
27th – % of Children with Excellent/Very Good Teeth
23rd – % of Children with Medical & Dental Preventive-Care Visits in Past Year

Click here for the full report.

Source: WalletHub

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Defensive Woes Lead To USI Men’s Loss

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Defensive Woes Lead To USI Loss

BOX SCORE (HTML) | GLVCSN REPLAY: USI VS. UIS

Birch Bayh Memorial Set For May 1 At Statehouse

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Birch Bayh Memorial Set For May 1 At Statehouse

April 19, 2019

A memorial service to honor former United States Senator Birch Bayh will take place at noon May 1 at the Indiana Statehouse. Bayh, who represented the Hoosier state in Washington from 1963-1981 after becoming the youngest-ever Indiana House speaker in 1954, died last month at age 91.

Numerous dignitaries have scheduled pay tribute to Bayh’s memory and accomplishments, including Gov. Eric Holcomb, Indiana House Speaker Brian Bosma, former congressmen Lee Hamilton and Baron Hill, and Chief Judge Jane Magnus-Stinson of the Southern Indiana District Court. The event is hosted by the Indiana Democratic Party.

Bayh also will be eulogized by his sons — former Indiana Governor and Senator Evan Bayh, and Christopher Bayh, a partner at Barnes & Thornburg in Indianapolis. Former Indiana first lady Susan Bayh will attend, as will their sons Beau and Nick. Birch Bayh’s widow, Katherine “Kitty” Bayh, will read a poem written by the Senator.

Birch Bayh leaves a lasting legacy in the Indiana legal and political communities. He is the only person who is not a founding father who ushered in two constitutional amendments. The federal courthouse in Indianapolis is named in his honor.

The memorial will take place in the south atrium of the Statehouse and is open to the public.

USI Posted First-Place Finish At Bryan Clay Invitational 

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USI Posted First-Place Finish At Bryan Clay Invitational 

AZUSA, Cal. – The University of Southern Indiana track and field teams with senior Hope Jones(Cumberland, Indiana) posted a first-place finish at the Bryan Clay Invitational hosted by Azusa Pacific University over the weekend.

JONES WINS 10K HEAT

Jones tamed a 10,000m race field that included many division I runners from UC Irvine, Utah, Grand Canyon, and UMKC while also facing a GLVC opponent in Illinois-Springfield. Her time of 35:29.55 moves her up from 10th to fifth all-time on USI’s record book along with positioning herself as the fastest Eagle in the 10,000m this season.

This is also Jones’ personal best time in the 10k in a USI uniform.

COMASTRI FOLLOWS SUIT

USI junior Jennifer Comastri (Indianapolis, Indiana) also etched her name into top performance in the same race, finishing 13th out of 25 runners with a time of 37:12.04.

HALL’S STEEPLE PERFORMANCE

Junior Nathan Hall (Springfield, Missouri) finished 74th out of 105 harriers in the 3,000m steeplechase in yet another loaded field across all divisions and one that saw an APU Stadium record broken as Hall crossed the line in 9:41.10.

This puts Hall on the top of the 3,000m steeplechase performance list for this current outdoor season.

WHAT’S NEXT?

The whole Eagle squad will return on April 25-26 in Hillsdale, Michigan for the 53rd Annual Hillsdale “Gina” Relays.

ADOPT A PET

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Scarla is a cute little female redtick Coonhound/Beagle mix. She was transferred to VHS from Hopkins County Humane Society when they were out of space and VHS had some empty kennels. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

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