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Indiana Veterans Affairs Leader Resigns after Grant Scrutiny

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Indiana Veterans Affairs Leader Resigns after Grant Scrutiny

The leader of Indiana’s Veterans Affairs Agency has resigned amid reports that he awarded department employees grant money that was intended for struggling veterans.

James Brown’s resignation comes a week after reports surfaced questioning the management of Indiana’s military family relief fund.

The Indianapolis Star reports that at least 11 agency employees who are veterans received a total of at least $40,000 through the fund.

The fund helps veterans with food, housing, utilities, medical services, and transportation.

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‘Sore Loser’ Isn’t A Good Look

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‘Sore Loser’ Isn’t A Good Look

By Mary Beth Schneider
TheStatehouseFile.com
It is one of my favorite moments in American politics: The peaceful transfer of power after an election.
It is most visible each time a new president is elected from the opposite party of the outgoing president. Together, they put politics aside and ride to the inauguration. Any bitter feelings and resentments are secondary to respect the choice of the voters.
That same peaceful process is repeated in smaller ways as governors, mayors and others assume office every year.

 

After this year’s general election drubbing, though, Republican legislators in some states are trying to rewrite the rules to preserve as much power for themselves as they can while weakening the power of the incoming Democrat governors and other statewide officeholders.
In Wisconsin, the legislature voted in the lame-duck session for legislation to shrink the powers of the new Democratic governor and attorney general, during what the Madison (WI) State Journal newspaper described as “an all-night push mostly behind closed doors.” And just to make it clear that they think too many voters is what did them in on Nov. 6, the bill also reduces early voting opportunities.
The Wisconsin House Speaker Robin Vos pontificated that this was all about good government. “We have allowed far too much authority to flow to the executive. To you, this is all about politics. To me, it’s about the institution.”
Notice he didn’t have that epiphany until voters chose Democrat Tony Evers over two-term Republican Gov. Scott Walker.
In Michigan, similar shenanigans are going on. For the first time in nearly 30 years in that state, Democrats have been elected to the office of governor, attorney general and secretary of state. The Republican legislature suddenly sees a need to shift power to themselves.
Losing in politics is never fun. But being the sore loser in politics is not just a bad look, it’s bad for democracy. This week we had the gracious example of President George H.W. Bush, who after a tough loss to Bill Clinton in 1992 left him a letter saying that Clinton was “our president” now. The letters Wisconsin and Michigan legislators are sending are making it clear that the new governor is not their governor.
If you think Indiana has a pure history on this, think again.
In 1994, Republicans won back control of both legislative chambers and the next year voted to diminish Democrat Gov. Evan Bayh’s power by changing the make-up of what was the State Election Board.  Chafing at the fact the governor got to pick the head of the three-member board, with each party getting the other two picks, they opted to create a new commission that removed the governor from the process.
The question isn’t whether the four-member commission — which frequently ends any oversight with a two-two party-line tie — is better or worse than a three-member board. It’s that it didn’t bother them until it was a Democratic governor making the pick. (I couldn’t find similar Democrat action in modern times, but I suspect that’s more from lack of opportunity as they haven’t had both the governor’s office and legislature since the mid-1960s.)
The most notable Indiana examples come from decades ago. In 1933, Democrats won control of state government and voted to give the Democratic governor stronger powers. Republicans won back the legislature in 1940 and in 1941 repealed those powers while reorganizing state government into five departments controlled by commissioners, not the governor.
The Indiana Supreme Court had the final word, ruling that the governor is the state’s chief executive and the legislature can’t usurp powers bestowed by the state constitution.
It’s likely the Wisconsin and Michigan courts will have the last word as well. But we shouldn’t need the courts to tell parties to respect the voters’ will.
This isn’t about policies. Those can and should change with election outcomes. This is about power.
When the votes are counted, the declaration of the winner shouldn’t be the signal for the losing side to use what power they have left to change the rules. If reverence for democracy isn’t enough, maybe political parties will recognize this: Being a sore loser is not a winning strategy.
FOOTNOTE: Mary Beth Schneider is editor of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
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REFLECTIONS By JIM REDWINE

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GAVEL GAMUT REFLECTION By JIM REDWINE 

REFLECTIONS

Memorials take many forms and have many purposes. Some are large in scope covering acres of land containing statues and museums, such as Gettysburg Battlefield, or are smaller in area but allow visitors to absorb history and meaning through sober reflection, such as the Washita Battlefield National Historic Site where Custer ambushed and killed Chief Black Kettle, his wife and most of his tribe of peaceful Native Americans.

What should be the design of a Posey County’s memorial to the people and events of October 1878? Of course, that is a community decision best made by representatives of various interests. However, I respectfully suggest the purposes of a memorial should be the same regardless of the physical structure:

To honor the victims;

To recognize the events;

To learn from the past;

And to inspire a desire to make a better future.

When one visits Gettysburg the opportunity to simply walk The Wheatfield as did the Confederates, or crouch behind short stone walls awaiting the charge as did the Yankees is to be transported into the soul of the battle of July 1863.

At Washita, to silently walk the dirt paths the fleeing Indian families took on foot as Custer and his soldiers pursued them on horseback is to experience the horror of November 1868. No museum is necessary.

Whereas the design of a memorial to the events of October 1878 in Posey County should be the result of careful planning with input from numerous persons, the location should be pre-determined. It should be where the murders took place, which was on the campus of our beautiful and historic courthouse.

I respectfully suggest a small area on the southeast corner of the courthouse campus be set aside and that there be medium size stones or marble steles with the names of the victims along with small marble benches where people could sit and absorb the events of 1878 while reflecting on their meaning. Of course, there could be a brief explanation of the events on a historical marker that would match the overall design. However, the design is not as important as the statement we as a community should make by finally publicly recognizing the events.

Want to read other Gavel Gamut articles? Go to www.jamesmredwine.com

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SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOR CORTEO CIRQUE DU SOLEIL TICKETS

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Corteo, the latest arena production from Cirque du Soleil, comes to Evansville Jan. 23-27, 2019 at the Ford Center!

As an ARTSWIN newsletter subscriber, enjoy this special offer and save 15% on tickets. Join the parade and get carried away with life

BUSHRIP

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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Have a valid email address to apply as communication regarding employment opportunities, examinations, interviews and….
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Men’s basketball hosts Ball State in rematch on Sunday

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Aces and Cardinals meet up at 2 p.m.

 On Sunday, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team looks to keep its perfect home record intact as they welcome Ball State to the Ford Center for a 2 p.m. CT game.

Last Time Out

– The Aces dropped their last game by a final of 87-77 on Tuesday at Arkansas State

– The Red Wolves used a 10-0 run in the first half to take the lead for good

– Shea Feehan and Marty Hill finished with 21 and 16 points, respectively; the tallies were career highs for both

– K.J. Riley finished with 15 points

– Evansville hit four of its first 20 3-point attempts in the loss while shooting 39.3% for the game

– A bright spot for UE came in its performance from the line as the Aces hit a season-high 79.4% of their free throws

 

Setting the Scene

– Evansville enters Sunday’s game with a perfect 4-0 mark at the Ford Center; it is the fourth year in a row UE has won its first four home games

– The Aces are 22-2 in their 24 home meetings versus Ball State

– UE’s bench has outscored its counterparts in five of the last six games

– The Aces and Cardinals are playing an in-season non-conference home-and-home series; it is the first time the Aces have done so since 2010 against Middle Tennessee State

– The home teams were victorious in both games that season

 

Takeaways from Arkansas State

– Evansville has faced double digit deficits in all four road games in 2018 while dropping the four games

– The Aces have been outrebounded by a 43.5-28.3 tally in road contests

– Shea Feehan improved his scoring away from the Ford Center to 18.0 points per game

– In the season opener at Illinois, UE turned the ball over 24 times; in the three road games since, the team has turned it over just 10.7 times

– K.J. Riley’s 9 free throw makes and 12 free throw tries were the most for a UE player in 2018

 

No Adjustment Needed

– For the fourth time this season, Shea Feehan scored 19 or more points as he set his Evansville mark with 21 at Arkansas State

– Feehan has drained 44.9% of his 3-point attempts and is averaging 2.75 per game; those tallies rank 52nd and 96th in the nation, respectively

– He is UE’s top force from the free throw line, hitting 78.6% of his tries

– For the season, he is averaging a team-high 13.8 points per game

Scouting the Opponent

– Ball State comes to the Ford Center sporting a 6-3 mark after earning a big 75-69 road win at preseason MVC favorite Loyola on Wednesday

– The Cardinals are led by Tayler Persons, who checks in with 16.9 points per game

– K.J. Walton is averaging 15.1 points while Tahjai Teague sits at 13.3; Walton was their leading scorer in the win over UE on Nov. 24 as he posted 20 points going 8-of-9 from the floor

– BSU earned an 82-72 win over UE in that game

 

Mother’s neglect conviction vacated under double jeopardy rule

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KATIE STANCOMBE FOR WWW.THEINDIANALAWYER.COM

The Indiana Court of Appeals “regrettably” reversed one of a mother’s conviction for neglect after her baby was found to have been dead for two days before being taken to the hospital, finding that one of the woman’s neglect convictions violated her right to be free from double jeopardy.

In November 2015, Makenzie Shultz went to check on her daughter, B.G., who was allegedly napping. When Shultz found her, B.G. was dead. But at the hospital, a doctor realized B.G. had been dead for roughly two-days as her skin was green and smelled of decomposition.

B.G.’s father, Chad Giroux, Jr., admitted to police that he and Shultz knew B.G. was dead and agreed to find her when a relative was present and to react like it just happened. Shultz was thus convicted with Level 1 felony neglect of a dependent resulting in death; Level 3 felony neglect of a dependent resulting in serious bodily injury; Level 5 felony neglect of a dependent resulting in bodily injury; Class A misdemeanor false informing; Class A misdemeanor failure to report a dead body; Level 6 felony obstruction of justice, and; two counts of Level 6 felony perjury. After the Level 5 and Level 6 neglect counts were merged with the Level 3 count, Schultz received a 44-year sentence.

On appeal, Shultz argued her convictions for Level 1 felony neglect of a dependent resulting in death and Level 3 felony neglect of a dependent resulting in serious bodily injury violated her constitutional right to be free from double jeopardy. Specifically, she contended the conviction violated the “actual evidence test.”

Shultz was not formally charged, but rather indicted by a grand jury. The appellate court found that the indictments were “vague and mentioned only the elements of the crime.” It noted that the indictments did not appear to allege any facts to distinguish the act of neglect underlying each charge, nor did it inform the jury which pieces of evidence supported the charge of neglect resulting in death and which other distinct pieces of evidence supported the charge of neglect resulting in serious bodily injury.

Therefore, the appellate court ultimately found that Shultz’s double jeopardy argument could stand.

“We regret that we must vacate one of Shultz’s convictions for neglect,” Judge Melissa May wrote for the court.  “When the State asked the jury to convict Shultz for the four counts of neglect, the prosecutor explicitly told the jury it could rely on asphyxiation to support all of those counts.

“Thus, there is a reasonable probability the jury relied on the same evidence to find Shultz guilty of all four counts,” May continued. “Accordingly, we vacate Shultz’s conviction of Level 3 felony neglect.”

However, the appellate court found sufficient evidence to support Shultz’s conviction of neglect of a dependent resulting in death in Makenzie D. Shultz v. State of Indiana, 790A2-1712-CR-2835. The case was remanded for resentencing.

Gov. Holcomb to Announce Next Level Agenda

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Below find Indiana Gov. Eric J. Holcomb’s public schedule for December 7, 2018, including events to unveil his 2019 Next Level Agenda.

 

Friday, December 7: Next Level Agenda Announcement in Columbia City

 

WHO:              Gov. Holcomb

Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch

 

WHAT:            Next Level Agenda announcement

 

WHEN:            1 p.m., Friday, December 7

 

WHERE:          Joseph Decuis Farm

6755 East 900 South
Columbia City, IN 46725