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Daily Scriptures

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Daily Scriptures

MONDAY

“O Lord, if you heal me, I will be truly healed; if you save me, I will be truly saved. My praises are for you alone!”
Jeremiah 17:14

TUESDAY

“People scoff at me and say, “What is this ‘message from the Lord ’ you talk about? Why don’t your predictions come true?””
Jeremiah 17:15

WEDNESDAY

“Lord, I have not abandoned my job as a shepherd for your people. I have noturged you to send disaster. You have heard everything I’ve said.”
Jeremiah 17:16

THURSDAY

“Lord, don’t terrorize me! You alone are my hope in the day of disaster.” Jeremiah 17:17

FRIDAY

“Do not do your work on the Sabbath, but make it a holy day. I gave this command to your ancestors,”
Jeremiah 17:22

SATURDAY

““‘But if you do not listen to me and refuse to keep the Sabbath holy, and if on theSabbath day you bring loads of merchandise through the gates of Jerusalem just as on other days, then I will set fire to these gates. The fire will spread to thepalaces, and no one will be able to put out the roaring flames.’””

Jeremiah 17:27

SUNDAY

“But I, the Lord, search all hearts and examine secret motives. I give all peopletheir due rewards, according to what their actions deserve.””
Jeremiah 17:10

Submitted to the City-County Observer by Karen Seltzer

Father’s assertion of Fifth Amendment rights splits COA

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

Even though the Indiana Court of Appeals had previously affirmed that the youngsters in this case were children in need of services, in part because of allegations of a father’s sexual abuse, it has reversed the termination of parental rights because the requirement that the father participate in a sex offender treatment program violated his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

The Indiana Department of Child Services found the seven minor children of M.H. (father) and R.H. (mother) were children in need of services after M.H.’s stepdaughter, R.W., accused him of molesting her. The Wells Circuit Court adjudicated the children as CHINS, and the Court of Appeals upheld the finding in May 2017 in In the Matter of La.H., Le.H., Lo.H., Ma.H., S.W., W.H., and Me.H. and M.H. (father) v. The Indiana Department of Child Services, 90A02-1609-JC-2135.

However, the focus remained on reuniting the family, and the trial court issued an order that required the father to complete a sex offender treatment course. M.H. refused to participate in the treatment program because he would have to take a polygraph and admit the truth of R.W.’s allegations, which, he argued, ran counter to his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent.

A split Court of Appeals agreed in In the Matter of the Parent-Child Relationship of Ma.H., Le.H. Lo.H., W.H., La.H., Me.H. and S.W. (children) and M.H. (Father) and R.H. (Mother) v. The Indiana Department of Child Services, 18A-JT-1296.

On appeal, DCS contended the law-of-the-case doctrine applies and can be used to make M.H. admit to sexual abuse since the appellate court affirmed that conclusion in the previous case. But the majority held the law-of-the-case doctrine cannot prohibit the father from invoking the Fifth Amendment.

“The case before us is distinguishable, as the liberty interest Father has at stake here is significant – his right to remain free of incarceration without the State proving his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt based on his coerced admission,” Judge Melissa May wrote for the majority joined by Judge John Baker. “…Because Father has not been convicted of crimes based on R.W.’s allegations, we agree the requirement that he admit committing those crimes implicates his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.”

The majority, thus, remanded the case for reinstatement of the CHINS proceedings, a re-examination of the requirements for reunification and the entry of a revised dispositional order.

Judge Margret Robb, who wrote the appellate court’s 2017 opinion affirming the CHINS finding, dissented.

“As a practical matter, I believe the majority opinion is written with too broad a brush: if a parent in a future CHINS/termination case says he or she did not do the act which precipitated DCS involvement in the family and refuses to participate in treatment designed to address the issue for fear of criminal reprisals, then DCS could not prove a termination case,” Robb wrote. “It would encourage refusal to participate in treatment.”

In addition, Robb argued that while the father can invoke his Fifth Amendment right, that does not prevent the consequences from asserting that right. Here, it was the possibility of termination of M.H.’s parental rights for failing to participate in meaningful therapy.

“However, even accepting Father’s position that he should not have been required to take a polygraph test or admit to wrongdoing and making no negative inference from his invocation of the Fifth Amendment, the essence of this case is that which we often encounter: Father says he did nothing wrong and R.W. says otherwise,” Robb wrote. “The trial court found R.W. to be a more credible witness than Father and again, determining credibility and weighing conflicting evidence is the trial court’s province.”

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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MAIL HANDLER ASSISTANT
United States Postal Service 3.6/5 rating   19,274 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$16 an hour
Please ensure you can receive email messages from our test vendor and follow instructions carefully so you can be. Weigh incoming sacks;…
Feb 12
Contact Representative (Customer Service Representative)
U.S. Federal Government 4.3/5 rating   539 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Responsive employer
$33,394 – $53,773 a year
Please make sure you answer all questions and follow all instructions carefully. Explain technical information, gather facts, evaluate evidence, and take action…
Feb 11
Confinement/Jail Officer
Posey County Sheriff’s Office – Mount Vernon, IN
$33,584 a year
Answer phone and provide information for the public. Maintain safety and security of the inmates and jail….
Easily apply
Feb 14
Jail/Confinement Officer
Posey County Sheriff’s Office – Mount Vernon, IN
$11.50 an hour
Answer phone and provide information for the public. Maintain safety and security of the inmates and jail….
Easily apply
Feb 14
Courier/Delivery Driver, Mon-Fri 2:30pm-8:00pm, $17.10/Hr.
FedEx Express 4/5 rating   2,043 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$17.10 an hour
The provisions of this article shall apply to any application by any person for a license or employment at any public or private employer, who has previously…
Feb 12
Emergency Management Assistant – EVPL Central
Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library 3.7/5 rating   3 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$11.57 an hour
I need a valid driver’s license. Regularly performing general office duties and clerical support for the Human Resources and Equity and Well-being team,…
Feb 14
Deputy Sheriff
Posey County Sheriff’s Office – Mount Vernon, IN
$36,000 a year
Investigate crashes, criminal cases, complaints, and any other issue which may develop as a safety concern….
Easily apply
Feb 14
Full-time Receiving and Shipping Associate ( $400-$450/Week)
Evansville Overstock Warehouse – Evansville, IN
$400 – $450 a week
Driver’s License (Required). As a Receiving and Shipping Associate at Lexington Overstock Warehouse your job duties could include stocking warehouse furniture,…
Easily apply
Feb 13
Receptionist/Office Assistant
City Lumber & Wholesale – Evansville, IN
The first priority of this position is to answer all incoming calls promptly and professionally; Answer and route phone calls….
Easily apply
Feb 14
Service Technician (Will Train)
– Evansville, IN
$40,000 – $50,000 a year
Competitive earnings, career, management, military, route manager, training, trainee, service, construction, driver, fleet, lawn, route, field, delivery,…
Feb 8

Resilient Evansville

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Life brings obstacles and challenges.
We can build Resilience: the ability to move forward with optimism and confidence.

Dr. Kenneth Ginsburg kicks off a game-changing, collaborative movement to help children and teens thrive in Evansville

Public Forum on Feb. 19 at 6:00 PM at Ivy Tech

Philadelphia pediatrician Dr. Kenneth Ginsburg will be in Evansville Feb. 19 and 20 to energize efforts to build resilience in children and teens. Dr. Ginsburg has dedicated his career to helping young people thrive, and he is now supporting a game-changing, collaborative movement called Resilient Evansville.

The community, parents and other caregivers are invited to hear him speak about the importance of developing resilience on Feb. 19 at 6:00 PM at Ivy Tech. His presentation is open to the public, and no reservation is necessary. Dr. Ginsburg will also meet with community leaders and train youth-serving professionals during his two-day visit.

Dr. Ginsburg specializes in Adolescent Medicine at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, and he is also a Professor of Pediatrics at the University Of Pennsylvania School Of Medicine. His clinical practice, teaching, research and advocacy efforts focus on building the strengths of young people by fostering their internal resilience. His goal is to translate the best of what is known from research and practice about Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) into practical approaches for parents, professionals and communities.

Resilient Evansville is a collaborative movement committed to being a game-changer in how caring adults in our community help children and teens thrive. Members include the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation, University of Southern Indiana, Youth First, Inc., Lampion Center, Mental Health America,Southwestern Behavioral Healthcare, Evansville Psychiatric Children’s Center, Deaconess Cross Pointe, St.Vincent-Evansville, Diehl Consulting, Department of Child Services, ECHO Community Healthcare, United Way of Southwestern Indiana, and Vanderburgh County Health Department.

Lt. Governor Crouch: Public schedule for Feb. 19 – 21

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Below is Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch’s public schedule for Feb. 19 – 21, 2019.

Tuesday, Feb. 19
What: Crouch speaks at Women’s Leadership Committee’s Advocacy Day
Host: Indiana Farm Bureau
When: 11:00 a.m. – Noon, ET, with Crouch remarks at 11:30 a.m., ET
Where: Indiana Farm Bureau, 225 S. East St., Indianapolis, IN 46202

Tuesday, Feb. 19
What: Crouch speaks at Galentine’s Day
Host: Indiana Grown
When: 6:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m., ET, with Crouch remarks at 6:35 p.m., ET
Where: The Sycamore at Mallow Run, 7070 Whiteland Rd., Bargersville, IN 46106

Wednesday, Feb. 20
What: Crouch tours Cargill
Host: Cargill
When: 10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m., ET
Where: 500 E. State Road 28, Tipton, IN 46072

Wednesday, Feb. 20
What: Crouch speaks at Muncie-Delaware Chamber of Commerce
Host: Muncie-Delaware Chamber of Commerce
When: 12:30 p.m. – 2:00 p.m., ET, with Crouch remarks at 1:15 p.m., ET
Where: Horizon Convention Center, 401 S. High St., Muncie, IN 47305

Thursday, Feb. 21
What: Crouch chairs IHCDA board meeting
Host: Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority
When: 10:00 a.m. – Noon, ET
Where: 30 S. Meridian St., Suite 900, Indianapolis, IN 46204

Thursday, Feb. 28
What: IHCDA board meeting
Host: Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority
When: 10:00 a.m. – Noon, ET
Where: 30 S. Meridian St., Suite 900, Indianapolis, IN 46204

1 Traffic Stop on US 41 nets Impaired Driver transporting Infant

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Vanderburgh County – Monday morning at approximately 7:50, Trooper Hunter Manning stopped the driver of a 2018 Ford Edge for speeding in the construction zone on US 41 near I-69. The vehicle was clocked by radar at 59 mph in a 45 mph zone. When Trooper Manning approached the vehicle he detected an odor of marijuana. The driver was identified as Mackenzie D. Bryant, 25, of Evansville. She had her 6 month old child restrained in a forward facing child safety seat. Children under the age of one-year and 20 lbs. are required by law to be restrained in a rear-facing child safety seat. The seat belt was installed around the child safety seat, but the seat belt was not secured properly. A roadside field sobriety test indicated Bryant was impaired. Further investigation revealed she had smoked synthetic marijuana earlier this morning. Bryant refused to submit to a chemical test. She was arrested and taken to the Vanderburgh County Jail where she is currently being held on bond. The Department of Child Services took custody of the child.

Arrested and Charges:

  • Mackenzie D. Bryant, 25, Evansville, IN
  1. Driving While Intoxicated with a Passenger under the age of 18, Class 6 Felony
  2. Possession of Synthetic Marijuana or Synthetic Look-Alike Substance, Class A Misd.
  3. Speeding
  4. Child Restraint Violation

Arresting Officer: Trooper Hunter Manning, Indiana State Police

Evansville Baseball Sunday Recap

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After dropping the first two games of the series in heartbreaking one run fashion, the University of Evansville baseball team took no chances in the series finale, as strong pitching combined with a trio of home runs, leading to a 7-2 victory over Mercer Sunday afternoon in Macon, Georgia.

It began on the hill,  where senior left-hander Alex Weigand got the start for the Aces, and after giving up a first inning home run, came back to pitch three shutout innings. For the day, the southpaw went five innings, allowing two runs on seven hits, while striking out four.

Trailing 1-0 in the fifth inning, freshman second baseman Danny Borgstrom snapped a no-hitter and a shutout, ripping a double to right-center, driving in senior outfielder Nate Reeder for the game-tying run. Later in the inning, Borgstrom would make it to third base on a single by junior catcher Ben Komonsky, then score on a fielder’s choice junior second baseman Craig Shepherd, giving Evansville the lead.

The Bears would come back to knot the game back up in the bottom of the inning, but in the top of the sixth freshman designated hitter A.J. Fritz continued the hot start to his collegiate career with a solo homer to left, putting the Aces back out in front, 3-2.

Weigand would give way to Austin Allinger in the sixth, and the senior righty would deliver, tossing 2 2/3 innings of one-hit shutout work, while striking out three.

In the seventh frame, senior outfielder Nate Reeder, a day removed from blasting a pair home runs, delivered a clutch two-out two-run blast, giving Evansville some much-needed breathing room, leading 5-2.

Kenton Crews would cap the Aces’ power burst with a two-run homer in the final frame, giving UE a five run pad they would not relinquish. Junior right-hander Jake McMahill, who took over in the eighth, would close out the game.

“Great team win today,” said University of Evansville baseball head coach Wes Carroll. It started on the mound with an outstanding performance from Alex Weigand. Our defense played great behind Weigand, Allinger and McMahill. Then our offense Stepped up late to pull away with a couple of home runs.”

Up  next for the Aces is a trip to Nashville to take on the top ranked team in the Nation, Vanderbilt.

Feehan leads Aces in loss to UNI

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UE drops 73-58 game to Panthers on Sunday

Three University of Evansville men’s basketball players recorded double figures, but UNI freshman A.J. Green scored a game-high 21 points to give the Panthers a 73-58 win over the Purple Aces on Sunday in the Ford Center.

Shea Feehan scored a team-high 14 points while knocking down three triples.  K.J. Riley recorded 12 points and a team-best six boards for UE (10-17, 4-10 MVC) while Shamar Givance had a solid effort with 10 points.  Green was the top scorer for UNI (12-15, 7-7

MVC) with his 21 points. He was one of four Panthers to reach double figures. Trae Berhow led everyone with 11 rebounds.

“At some point, we have to let teams stop pushing us around and get to the rim easily,” UE head coach Walter McCarty said.  “We are not playing with any passion or urgency right now. Until we figure it out, this will continue to happen. We are not doing anything right now that connects us as a team.”

Givance got the Aces on the board with a triple on the first possession of the game.  The Panthers took their first lead of the day at 6-5. Evansville was able to regain the lead and push it out to 12-8 on a triples by Shea Feehan.

The Panthers responded with a pair of runs that saw them take a double digit lead.  UNI notched the next nine points to go up 17-12. A.J. Green had 10 of the Panthers’ first 12 points to spearhead the run.  After Feehan knocked down three free throws to make it a 2-point game, UNI came right back with a 10-0 stretch that pushed its lead to 27-15 with seven minutes remaining in the first half.

UNI matched its highest lead, taking a 36-22 advantage into the break.  Green led UNI with 13 points while Riley paced Evansville with eight.

Riley moved into double figures when he hit the first shot of the second half.  Northern Iowa responded with a 5-0 stretch that pushed their lead to a game-high 41-24.  Eight minutes into the final period, the Panther lead stood at 49-33. Noah Frederking’s triple started a 7-0 run that made it a 49-40 game.

Once again, UNI had the answer as they extended their lead back to 16 points (58-42) with just under seven minutes left and held strong to take the 73-58 win.

“We have to do a better job of knowing the scouting reports and other team’s tendencies,” Feehan said after the game. “I feel like what we are doing wrong are things we can control.”

Freshman Jawaun Newton made his first start of the season on Sunday.  He saw 17 minutes of action. Chatkevicius scored seven points while going 3-of-5 from the field.  As a team, the Aces shot 41.3% while the Panthers checked in at 46.4%. UNI finished with a 37-25 rebounding edge.