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SHERIFF’S OFFICE RECOGNITION CEREMONY ANNOUNCEMENT

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On Monday, January 14, 2019 the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office will host a public ceremony to recognize the accomplishments of several sheriff’s deputies and one confinement officer. Additionally, five (5) new deputy sheriffs will be sworn in. The ceremony will be held in the ballroom of the Old Courthouse (201 NW 4th Street) at 9 a.m.

Those individuals being recognized are:

New Deputy Sheriffs:
Erich Carlson
Evan Luigs
Jacob Fuller
Eric Gander
Eric Ervin

Awards:
Sheriff’s Community Service Award – Detective Matt Elrod
Life Saver Award – Officer Steven Stuart
Certificate of Appreciation – Mr. Shawn Collins (Extend Group)

Retirements:

Sgt. Aaron Hunter – 24 years of service
Lt. Dave Townsend – 23 years of service
Major Rick Pace – 23 years of service

Promotions: 
Korey Chapman – Sergeant
Brandon Harrison – Sergeant
Jason King – Sergeant
Erik Nilssen – Sergeant
Andrew Guth – Sergeant
Nathan Sugarman – Lieutenant
Robert Clark – Lieutenant
Mark Rasure – Lieutenant
Noah Robinson – Major

ILEA Graduates:
Craig Carroll – Probationary Deputy Sheriff
Elliot Lehmann – Probationary Deputy Sheriff
Michael Schneider – Probationary Deputy Sheriff

Completion of Probationary Year:
Jordan Kuester – Deputy Sheriff
Chelsea Trail – Deputy Sheriff
Jared Zwilling – Deputy Sheriff
Clint Stanton – Deputy Sheriff
Michael Brown – Deputy Sheriff

USI Board of Trustees approves three honorary degrees; Major gift announced to benefit College of Nursing and Health Professions

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The USI Board of Trustees approved the conferral of honorary doctoral degrees to Dr. Linda L. M. Bennett, Dr. Stephen Bennett and Betty J. Worthington at a regular meeting on Thursday, January 10 in Indianapolis. All recipients will be recognized and be presented their degrees at the spring 2019 Graduate Commencement Ceremony on Friday, April 26.

Dr. Linda L. M. Bennett, USI president emerita, will receive an honorary Doctor of Laws degree. Bennett became president in July 2009, after serving as provost and vice president for Academic Affairs since 2003. She served as the third USI president for nine years before retiring in 2018. Bennett led initiatives at USI focused on enrollment and retention management, outreach and engagement, faculty development, the retention of intellectual capital, accreditation renewal, and long-range strategic planning.

An active civic leader, Bennett has contributed to a variety of organizations, including serving as chair of the WNIN Public Broadcasting Board of Directors as well as working with the Deaconess Health Systems Board of Directors, American Red Cross, Mayor’s Diversity Lecture Series, Evansville Philharmonic Orchestra, Welborn Baptist Foundation, Economic Development Coalition of Southwest Indiana, the Mayor’s Education Roundtable and the Rotary Club of Evansville. In 2016, she received the Indiana Commission for Women Torchbearer Award and Trailblazer Award and was named a Sagamore of the Wabash in 2018. Bennett lives in Evansville with her husband Dr. Stephen Bennett and continues supporting the community and the University.

Dr. Stephen E. Bennett, retired professor of political science and author, will receive an honorary Doctor of Laws degree for his dedication to higher education, establishment of presidential, academic and athletic scholarships and his service to USI from 2003 to 2018.

Betty J. Worthington, longtime supporter of USI, will also receive an honorary Doctor of Laws degree. Worthington has served as a director on the USI/New Harmony Foundation Board and is a champion of the arts, New Harmony and the University.

First endowed professorship established in College of Nursing and Health Professions 

The Board also heard a report that the University of Southern Indiana Foundation has received a $1.35 million leadership gift from the estate of the late Hershel B. Whitney to USI’s College of Nursing and Health Professions.

The leadership gift includes $1.1 million for the establishment of the Hershel B. Whitney Professorship in Gerontology and a $250,000 endowment that will provide unrestricted funding for USI’s Occupational Therapy Program.

“This leadership gift is another indication of how more and more people are becoming aware of the good work accomplished at USI,” said USI President Ronald S. Rochon. “To invest in the University at such a significant level is a testament to Mr. Whitney’s thoughtful planning and to the high caliber of our faculty and programs. We are profoundly grateful.”
Dr. Katherine Ehlman, associate professor of gerontology and director of USI’s Center for Healthy Aging and Wellness, has been named the inaugural holder of the Hershel B. Whitney Professorship in Gerontology. As a faculty member and the director of the Center for Healthy Aging and Wellness, Ehlman encourages leadership, development and enhancement among students, colleagues and professionals within the field of gerontology, while inspiring creativity in addressing issues impacting the elder population. She is involved in research in the areas of nursing home quality, dementia and student attitudes on aging, and has published numerous peer-reviewed articles on these subjects. Ehlman has helped to secure more than $1.3 million in internal and external grant funding for related projects. She is a certified health education specialist, a certified dementia care trainer, and is a licensed Indiana health facilities administrator.

Also in recognition of this gift, the Hershel B. Whitney Occupational Therapy Lab will be named in the USI facilities within the Stone Family Center for Health Sciences in downtown Evansville.

“This generous gift comes at an exciting time for the College of Nursing and Health Professions and USI. Our innovative work in the field of gerontology is garnering attention from national and global experts,” said Dr. Ann White, dean of the College of Nursing and Health Professions. “The support we have received from the Hershel B. Whitney trust will accelerate our progress and will allow Dr. Ehlman to build upon her already stellar career and recognition for her expertise in this field. With this funding, our Occupational Therapy Program will now have one of the most advanced OT labs in the state of Indiana. We are excited about the positive opportunities yet to come as a result.”

Mr. Whitney resided in Indianapolis and was employed with Eli Lilly and Company until his retirement. Following his death in 2015, the Hershel B. Whitney Charitable Trust selected the University of Southern Indiana as the appropriate venue to make a positive impact on programs that enhance the care and support of our aging population.

 

University of Evansville to Celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day

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The University of Evansville will celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day 2019 on January 21. This year’s theme is a “Labor of Love.” The schedule of events follows. All events are free and open to the public.

11:45 a.m.-1:00 p.m., Student Fitness Center

Symbolic March: Civil Rights March on Washington and Pre-March Rally

Speakers include Christopher M. Pietruszkiewicz, UE president; LaNeeca Williams, UE chief diversity officer; Aaron Cochran, Black Student Union outreach liaison; and Keith Turner, UE John Wesley Minister and assistant chaplain. The march will then leave campus and return by 1:00 p.m.

1:00-2:30 p.m., Student Fitness Center

Labor of Love: UE Gives Back

UE students and community members, including students from Evansville Day School, will stuff care bags for foster children as part of the Value Every Child program from the Lutheran Church of our Redeemer.

1:30 p.m. and 2:00 p.m., Student Fitness Center

Labor of Love: Panel Discussion hosted by UE’s Black Student Union

Local black professionals discuss why they chose their field, professional advice, and how they manage work-life balance at two 30-minute sessions. The audience will be encouraged to ask questions of the panelists.

6:00-7:00 p.m. Eykamp Hall, Room 251, Ridgway University Center

William G. and Rose M. Mays Martin Luther King Jr. Lectureship and Reception

Keynote speaker is Cynthia E. Nance, dean emeritus and Nathan G. Gordon Professor at the University of Arkansas School of Law. Nance serves as the law school’s director of pro bono and community engagement. She teaches labor law, employment law, workplace legislation and poverty law. Her articles appear in journals including the Iowa Law Review, Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law, Iowa Law Review, Rutgers Law Review, and Brandeis Law Review. The gnerosity of William G. and Rose M. Mays funds the keynote speaker during UE’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration.

Incoming ND law dean bringing experience, excitement

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IL for www.theindianalawyer.com

As its next dean, Notre Dame Law School is welcoming a legal scholar who has more than two decades experience teaching in the classroom and believes that law is the “noblest profession in the world.”

G. Marcus Cole, a professor at Stanford University Law School, has been appointed dean and professor of law at Notre Dame Law School, according to an announcement from the university Thursday. He will become the law school’s 11th dean and will be the first African-American to lead the institution.

 

“Professor Cole is an extraordinary person, teacher, scholar and leader who brings to this role a deep commitment to our Law School’s mission, vision and values,” said Thomas G. Burish, provost at Notre Dame. “Search committee members were uniformly impressed with his reputation for collegiality, as well as his global experience and involvement on issues ranging from social justice and equality to providing educational access for low-income children.”

Cole will succeed Nell Jessup Newton, who is stepping down July 1 after serving 10 years as dean. Along with his tenure in academia, Cole has experience as a practicing attorney and as a federal appellate court clerk.

He is looking forward to joining the Fighting Irish.

“To me, law is the noblest profession in the world,” Cole said. “Lawyers save lives, protect rights and grease the wheels of the economy. It has been the great honor of my life to train lawyers, and I am humbled and honored to have the opportunity to help do so at one of the most important law schools in the world.”

Cole graduated in 1993 from Northwestern University School of Law, where he served as editor-in-chief of the Northwestern Journal of International Law and Business. After clerking for now-Senior Judge Morris Sheppard Arnold of the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals, he was an associate practicing complex commercial litigation at Mayer Brown & Platt from August 1994 to June 1997.

In July 1997, he switched to academia, joining the Stanford University Law School as an assistant professor. He is now the William F. Baxter-Visa International Professor of Law and is considered a leading scholar of empirical law and economics of commerce and finance.

He brings extensive classroom experience, having taught courses in bankruptcy, banking regulation, contracts and venture capital. He also has experience in leadership, serving as associate dean at Stanford for curriculum and academic affairs from 2003 to 2008.

“Professor Cole brings to Notre Dame scholarly accomplishment, experience in academic leadership, an impressive set of international appointments and a concern for social inequities and the human impact of law,” said University of Notre Dame President the Rev. John I. Jenkins. “We warmly welcome Professor Cole as the new dean of our law school.”

Cole’s appointment completes the leadership transition that all the law schools in Indiana have experienced in the past five-and-a-half years. Andrew Klein became dean of Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law in 2013 which was followed by Austen Parrish at Indiana University Maurer School of Law and Andrea Lyon at Valparaiso Law School in 2014.

Lyon stepped down as dean in 2018, and David Cleveland is serving as interim dean of Valparaiso.

Newton, who is currently the only woman law school dean in the state, led Notre Dame through the Great Recession that upended the legal profession and put unprecedented pressure on law schools to produce practice-ready attorneys. Yet the South Bend institution admitted classes with median LSAT scores in the 160s and saw a majority of its graduates land J.D.-required jobs.

Cole noted the storied reputation of the law school and its place in the future.

“As the needs of our society call for ethically and morally guided lawyers and leaders,” he said, “Notre Dame will continue to answer that call.”

2019 Indiana State of the State Address Will be Tuesday, January 15

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Indiana Governor Eric J. Holcomb will deliver his third State of the State Address Tuesday, January 15, 2019 in the chamber of the Indiana House of Representatives. The address will be broadcast live statewide.

More information for media set-up will follow in the days ahead.

 

WHAT:           2019 State of the State Address

 

WHO:             Indiana Governor Eric J. Holcomb

 

WHEN:           Tuesday, January 15, 2019

7 p.m. ET

 

WHERE:        Indiana Statehouse, Indiana House of Representatives Chamber

 

Each year, Indiana’s governor addresses both houses of the state legislature, the state’s supreme court justices, and other state leaders at the beginning of the legislative session in the State of the State Address. It provides an opportunity for the governor to report on the status of the state’s affairs, highlight key accomplishments of the past year and outline key priorities for the year ahead.

 

Gov. Holcomb Public Schedule for January 11 and 14

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Below find Gov. Eric J. Holcomb’s public schedule for January 11 and 14, 2019.

 

Friday, January 11: Saturn Petcare Jobs Announcement

WHO:              Gov. Holcomb

State and local officials

 

WHAT:            The governor will give remarks.

 

WHEN:            11 a.m., Friday, January 11

 

WHERE:          Saturn Petcare

411 E. Dallas Dr.

Terre Haute, IN 46802

Click here for a map.

 

Monday, January 14: Indiana Ready Mixed Concrete Association Annual Short Course

WHO:              Gov. Holcomb

 

WHAT:            The governor will give remarks.

 

WHEN:            9:15 a.m., Monday, January 14

 

WHERE:          Union Station Grand Ballroom

123 W. Louisiana St.

Indianapolis, IN 46204

 

Monday, January 14: Swearing-In Ceremony for Secretary of State, Auditor & Treasurer

WHO:              Gov. Holcomb

First Lady Janet Holcomb

Chief Justice Loretta Rush

Secretary of State Connie Lawson
State Auditor Tera Klutz

State Treasurer Kelly Mitchell

House Speaker Brian Bosma

President Pro Tem Rodric Bray

 

WHAT:            The governor will give remarks.

 

WHEN:            11 a.m., Monday, January 14

 

WHERE:          Indiana Statehouse

200 W. Washington St.

Indianapolis, IN 46204

 

AG Curtis Hill announces settlements with Fiat Chrysler and supplier over consumer and environmental improprieties

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Attorney General Curtis Hill today announced that Indiana, as a member of a coalition of states, has reached landmark settlements with Fiat Chrysler and supplier Robert Bosch. These settlements provide for combined civil-penalty payments of approximately $2.5 million to Indiana and more than $171 million to 52 jurisdictions nationwide. Bosch supplied and helped program the illegal emissions “defeat device” software used by both Fiat Chrysler and Volkswagen in their diesel vehicles.

“Whenever businesses take unfair advantage of Hoosier consumers or otherwise disregard Indiana state laws, they should anticipate that our office will come after them hard for whatever damages they have done,” Attorney General Hill said. “This settlement represents the fruits of such labor. We will continue to work hard every day to protect consumers and defend the rule of law.”

Fiat Chrysler

Following a nearly two-year investigation, the Office of the Attorney General found that Fiat Chrysler Automobiles N.V., its U.S. subsidiary FCA US, LLC, its Italian affiliate V.M. Motori S.p.A. and V.M. North America, Inc. – collectively, “Fiat Chrysler” – installed unlawful “defeat device” software and undisclosed Auxiliary Emissions Control Devices (“AECDs”) in 1,645 Jeep Grand Cherokee and Dodge Ram 1500 diesel vehicles that the automaker sold in Indiana. These vehicles are from the model years 2014-16.

The Attorney General’s Office also found that Fiat Chrysler cheated on federal and state emissions tests by calibrating the vehicles’ software to conceal that the vehicles emitted higher than permitted levels of harmful nitrogen oxides (NOx) in real-world driving conditions. Further, Fiat Chrysler misled consumers by falsely claiming the “Eco-Diesel”-branded Jeep SUVs and Ram 1500 trucks were environmentally friendly and compliant with the law in all 50 states.

The settlements announced today require Fiat Chrysler to pay Indiana $1,028,125 in civil penalties under Indiana’s consumer protection laws for deceptively and unfairly marketing, selling and leasing the vehicles to consumers. Nationwide – excluding the separate penalties the company will be required to pay to the federal government and California – the multistate agreement is expected to result in payments totaling $72.5 million to 49 states, Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia and Guam.

Indiana’s settlement also prohibits Fiat Chrysler from engaging in future unfair or deceptive acts and practices in connection with its dealings with consumers. Further, it requires Fiat Chrysler to carry out its obligations under a related settlement agreement in the Multidistrict Litigation (“MDL Consumer Settlement”) pending in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

The MDL Consumer Settlement, once approved by the MDL court, will resolve claims brought by a national class of affected consumers. The MDL Consumer Settlement requires Fiat Chrysler to: eliminate the “defeat device” features from the relevant software through a software “flash fix”; provide eligible owners and lessees extended warranties; and, together with co-defendant Bosch, pay eligible owners who take their vehicles to authorized dealers for the software repair an average restitution of approximately $2,908 and pay lessees and former owners restitution of $990.

Related settlements between Fiat Chrysler and the U.S. Department of Justice, the Environmental Protection Agency, the California Air Resources Board and the State of California also require Fiat Chrysler to make available 200,000 upgraded catalytic converters to mitigate air pollution across the country when installed by Fiat Chrysler vehicle owners as replacements to their existing catalytic converters.

Assuming all owners and lessees nationwide participate, this will result in total available restitution of approximately $307 million, including approximately $4.7 million to affected owners and lessees of 1,645 vehicles in Indiana.

The settlements with Fiat Chrysler follow earlier comprehensive settlements reached between Indiana, along with other state, federal and private actors, and Volkswagen for equipping, marketing, selling and leasing more than 570,000 Volkswagen, Audi and Porsche diesel vehicles with illegal “defeat devices.”  Under those settlements, Volkswagen paid Indiana civil penalties of more than $6 million, fixed or repurchased the affected vehicles, and paid restitution to Indiana consumers.

Bosch

Bosch is a multinational engineering company well known for its consumer products. It is also a major supplier to the global automotive industry. Among the products Bosch supplies to its auto manufacturing customers are the electronic control units (“ECUs”) that house the complex software that controls nearly all aspects of an engine’s performance, including emissions systems. When Volkswagen, a Bosch customer, was revealed to have systematically utilized “defeat device” software in its diesel vehicles, several states attorneys general, including Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill, commenced a separate investigation into the role played by Bosch in enabling its customers to potentially violate federal and state emissions regulations. Today, after another Bosch customer, Fiat Chrysler, has settled claims that it too employed illegal “defeat devices,” the Attorney General’s Office is able to announce the conclusion of that separate investigation into Bosch’s conduct.

As a result of this investigation, Attorney General Hill concluded that Bosch facilitated the implementation of the “defeat device” software in more than 600,000 Volkswagen and Fiat Chrysler vehicles over a period that spanned more than a decade. Notwithstanding concerns about the illegal “defeat devices” raised internally, to management, and externally, to Volkswagen and Fiat Chrysler, Attorney General Hill found that Bosch continued to assist these customers as they implemented the “defeat devices” and concealed their misconduct from regulators and the public.

Under the terms of the proposed settlement with the Indiana Attorney General, Bosch will pay Indiana $1,490,940 in consumer and environmental civil penalties. The agreement also includes precedent-setting injunctive terms and requires Bosch to maintain robust processes to monitor compliance and to refuse to accommodate requests for software development and programming that could result in the installation of “defeat device” software.

Today’s settlement with Bosch recognizes the important role that suppliers play in ensuring regulatory and legal compliance in the automotive industry and establishes the important precedent that those who knowingly go along with their clients’ wrongful conduct will be held accountable

Under a multistate agreement involving Indiana and 49 other jurisdictions – including Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, Guam and all states other than California, Texas and West Virginia – Bosch will pay a total of $98.7 million under the jurisdictions’ consumer protection and environmental laws and make a separate $5 million payment to the National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) for training and future enforcement purposes. Under the related MDL Settlements, Bosch will also pay approximately $27.5 million to consumers who purchased or leased the affected Fiat Chrysler vehicles. Bosch earlier paid more than $275 million to consumers who purchased or leased the affected Volkswagen vehicles.