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Lt. Governor Crouch: Public schedule Jan. 30

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Below is Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch’s public schedule for Jan. 30, 2019.

Wednesday, Jan. 30
What: Crouch speaks at Prosperity Indiana Summit
Host: Prosperity Indiana
When: 11:45 a.m. – 12:45 p.m., ET, with Crouch remarks at 12:10 p.m., ET
Where: Indianapolis Marriott East, 7202 E. 21st St., Indianapolis, IN 46219
*Media are welcome

UE’s Clay Club and Art Department to Present Artist and Ceramist Gail Russell

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The University of Evansville Clay Club and Department of Art will welcome artist and ceramist Gail Russell to the University from February 5-6. Russell will give demonstrations of throwing on a potter’s wheel on Tuesday, February 5, from 1:00-4:00 p.m., and Wednesday, February 6, from 2:00-5:00 p.m. in the UE Ceramics Studio. She will also present a lecture on Tuesday, February 5, from 6:30-8:00 p.m. in Eykamp Hall, Room 255, Ridgway University Center. All of these events are free and open to the public.

Russell earned her MFA from the University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois, and her BFA from UE. She has been owner, operator, and full-time artist potter at Peachblow Pottery in Lewis Center, Ohio, since 1986.

Russell has participated in approximately 125 exhibitions, taught numerous workshops, and executed many commissions. She has appeared in several books, including Introduction to Ceramics by Graham Flight, The Ceramic Surface by Mathias Osterman, and Contemporary Studio Porcelain by Peter Lane. Russell was honored to be one of the workshop presenters for the inaugural Zanesville Prize Conference in October 2014. The highlight of this event is an international exhibition of contemporary ceramic art, with a top prize of $20,000.

Judge to DOC: Restore Credit Time For “Unreasonable And Arbitrary’”Sanction

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Department of Correction must restore nearly six months of lost credit time to a Westville inmate after a federal judge determined the inmate’s disciplinary loss of credit time was “unreasonable and arbitrary.”

Franklin Cox is serving a 45-year sentence in the Westville Correctional Facility for a 2002 murder conviction. In June 2017, Cox filed a “Verified Petition for Additional Credit Time” in the St. Joseph Superior Court seeking credit for activities he participated in at Westville. However, the programs Cox sought credit for were not on the roster of available DOC cut time programs, so the trial court summarily denied his petition without a hearing.

Then in August 2017, a conduct report was filed alleging Cox “filed a frivolous lawsuit claiming he is owed credit time for classes which are not DOC-approved time cut programs.” That conduct, the report said, constituted the offense of “(a)sserting and/or filing a false lien or judgment.”

Cox, however, argued during a disciplinary hearing that his actions weren’t frivolous because a judge “gave (him) time to respond,” adding that “(t)he court would’ve shut it down if it was frivolous.” But a DOC hearing officer determined Cox had committed an actionable offense and sanctioned him with the loss of 165 days earned credit time. Of those days, 120 were for the instant offense and 45 were from a previously suspended sanction.

Cox then filed a habeas petition in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, arguing his petition was not a “lawsuit.” He also argued there was insufficient evidence to warrant the revocation of his earned credit time, and the district court agreed.

“The conduct report — and underlying facts supporting the report — fail to establish that Cox filed a lien or judgment against another person that was false or otherwise untrue,” Judge Jon E. DeGuilio wrote Monday in Franklin J. Cox v. Warden, 3:18-cv-076. “…While the verified petition may have been frivolous because the relief Cox sought was not sanctioned by IDOC, the petition itself — in no way, shape, or form — can be viewed as constituting that of a lien or judgment.

“There is also no evidence to suggest that Cox intended or actually filed the verified petition against another person,” DeGuilio continued. “Rather, as stated, he filed the verified petition in the St. Joseph Superior Court against the State of Indiana in connection with his criminal case. Because there is no factual basis in the record to support the (Disciplinary Hearing Officer’s) guilty finding, it was unreasonable and arbitrary for the DHO to conclude Cox violated offense A-122.”

Thus, the court granted Cox’s habeas petition and ordered DOC to file documentation by Feb. 28 showing that Cox’s guilty finding was vacated and his related credit time was restored.

Split justices uphold ruling for insurer in truck crash that killed 3

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Dave Stafford for www.theiindianalawyer.com

Justices of the Indiana Supreme Court decided in a 3-2 vote last week to let stand a ruling that an insurance company owes no duty to victims of a truck crash in which the driver knowingly operated the vehicle with faulty brakes.

Justices Steven David and Christopher Goff were in the minority of justices who would have granted transfer and heard the appeal in ONB Insurance Group, Inc., et al. v. Amy Jones, et al., 40A01-1707-CT-1513.

In July, the Indiana Court of Appeals reversed the Jennings Circuit Court’s denial of summary judgment for Old National Insurance and its representative, Joseph E. Kenworthy, in a lawsuit brought by the estates of victims of a truck crash in 2011.

The case arose after a driver for Old National’s insured, C&K Transport Inc., stopped at a weigh station in Ohio and discovered the truck’s brakes were not working. The driver called C&K owner William Hackney, who told the driver to drive the truck to Mitchell, Indiana, on a route that did not have weigh stations. The driver refused, and Hackney drove the truck on the route himself without first making any repairs.

That night, Hackney’s truck struck a vehicle driven by Edward Megel on U.S. 50 in which Megel’s wife, JoAnn, and granddaughter, Darcy, were passengers. Edward and Darcy died in the crash and JoAnn died from injuries sustained in the crash less than two weeks later.

The Court of Appeals reversed, applying the foreseeability test from Goodwin v. Yeakle’s Sports Bar and Grill, Inc., 62 N.E.3d 384 (Ind. 2016).

Justices also split 3-2 on three other cases denied transfer last week. They were:

• Marques D. Trice v. State of Indiana, 18A-CR-697. Justices let stand an Indiana Court of Appeals ruling from November reversing a Marion Superior Court order to destroy Marques Trice’s handgun after he was convicted of Class A misdemeanor carrying a handgun without a license. The COA held that Trice’s carrying the weapon with an expired carry permit did not amount to “misuse” of a firearm. Chief Justice Loretta Rush and Goff would have heard this case.

• Indiana Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board v. Jenna Thomas, 79A02-1712-PL-2904. The Indiana Court of Appeals in August reversed the Tippecanoe Circuit Court, which voided the licensing board’s suspension of Jenna Thomas’ clinical social worker license because the board did not act within 90 days of an administrative hearing. The COA held the 90-day period in the Administrative Orders and Procedures Act was “directory rather than mandatory,” and that the trial court abused its discretion in vacating the board’s suspension order. Justices David and Geoffrey Slaughter were in the minority voting to hear Thomas’ appeal in this case.

• Whitesell Precision Components, Inc. v. Autoform Tool & Manufacturing, LLC, 18A-PL-848. In a business dispute, the Indiana Court of Appeals in August affirmed an injunction entered in Marion Superior Court regarding the cost and supply of parts Whitesell supplied to Autoform to be used in a manufacturing process. Rush and David would have granted transfer. Justices heard Whitesell on petition to transfer last week.

Justices denied transfer in 19 cases last week and granted one that was decided Wednesday — Q.D.-A., Inc. v. Indiana Department of Workforce Development, 19S-EX-43 — a case regarding the classification of “drive-away drivers” as independent contractors.

Weekly Supreme Court transfer lists may be viewed here.

Mercer Will Not Seek Re-Election To City Council At Large

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On Monday,  January 28, 2019, City Councilwoman Michelle Mercer released the following statement:
It is with deep disappointment, I announce I will not seek re-election for City Council at Large. This has been a very difficult decision. A citywide campaign for an at large seat in IN’s 3rd largest city requires an extensive time commitment and effort (six times that of award seat). Personally, it is not a good time for me to be able to devote the time required to run a successful citywide re-election campaign.
I will continue to devotedly serve the remainder of my term with the same deep commitment, energy, passion, and fervor that I have throughout the past three years. Serving as City council at Large is an honor and a privilege that I continue to cherish.
This term has been and continues to be probably the most exciting ever in Evansville’s history to serve on City Council. Evansville is moving forward with business and economic developments and quality of life developments like never before. I am proud to be a leader in those vibrant advancements for our city.
I am hopeful there will be another opportunity to seek election to public office at a better time. I thank all those who have supported me to gain this seat and continue to support me in serving out my term.
Michelle Mercer
City Councilwoman at Large

JANUARY ARCTIC BLAST

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EPD is trying to identify suspect of Credit car theft

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Evansville Police are trying to identify a woman suspected of using a stolen credit card on at least two occasions.

The woman used the stolen credit card at two different retail stores on the east side of Evansville on December 26, 2018. Please contact Detective T. Bickel at 812-436-7994 if you recognize the woman.

 

Former UE golfer Tyler Gray takes talents to next level

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Gray participating in PGA Tour Latinoamerica event

Former University of Evansville men’s golfer Tyler Gray graduated in 2018, leaving the program with the lowest stroke average in school history.  Less than a year later, Gray is hoping to make it at the next level in PGA TOUR Latinoamerica.

The Huntingburg, Ind. native is in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to take part in the PTLA Qualifying Tournament.  It begins on Tuesday, January 29 and runs through February 1.  In what will be a great experience for Gray, the tournament is being played at the Olympic Golf Course that was used in the 2016 Summer Olympics.

“This is a great opportunity to gain status on the tour and have a guarantee of a place to play,” Gray said.  “Gaining status would open doors to where I could live and practice out of while back in the states.  I am looking forward to getting down there and getting the event started.”

A win in the tournament would give Gray full status for the entire PGA TOUR Latinoamerica season.  A finish of 2nd through 13th would get him status for half of the season while a finish between 14th and 35th would grant conditional status.

Last year’s schedule saw 18 tournaments on the docket in 11 countries including: Guatemala, Mexico, Argentina, Jamaica, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Brazil, Chile, Peru and the United States.