Gov. Holcomb to Attend Jobs for America’s Graduates’ Board of Directors Meeting
Indiana Governor Eric J. Holcomb will lead the Jobs for America’s Graduates’ (JAG) national board of directors meeting on Thursday, Nov. 15 in Washington D.C.
Gov. Holcomb was elected in January 2018 to serve as JAG’s national board chair.
JAG has served over 1.2 million youth in its history and is currently helping 63,000 young people in 1,250 schools and other locations in 34 states achieve academic, career and life success. After more than two decades of operation, JAG has proven to be one of the most cost-effective and successful state-level strategies for tackling high dropout rates, low academic performance, youth unemployment and other critical issues related to at-risk youth.
JAG Indiana is the largest program in the country, with approximately 137 participating programs and more than 22,000 graduates since inception in 2006.
Visit jagindiana.org to learn more about the Indiana JAG program. Click here to watch the official JAG Indiana video.
Subcommittee silently makes sexual harassment recommendations; Legislative Council must act
OLIVIA COVINGTON FOR www. theindianaialwyer.com
A legislative subcommittee has quietly issued new recommendations for how Indiana’s Legislature should respond to complaints of sexual harassment by legislative employees, but it’s still unclear whether the Legislative Council will meet next week’s statutorily-mandated deadline to officially adopt the recommendations.
The Legislative Council’s Personnel Subcommittee has released a proposed report that includes two recommendations for ways in which the Legislature can improve its sexual harassment policies: amending legislative ethics rules and mandating training for legislators and members of the legislative ethics committees. The recommendations were developed pursuant to House Enrolled Act 1309, which required the subcommittee to develop sexual harassment prevention and investigation recommendations and the full council to approve those recommendations by Nov. 20.
In light of the #MeToo movement, HEA 1309 represented an initial legislative step toward curbing sexual harassment at the Indiana Statehouse. The bill, authored by Rep. Sharon Engleman, R-Georgetown, mandated that each legislator complete one hour of sexual harassment prevention training each year, as well mandating that the Personnel Subcommittee develop additional prevention and response recommendations.
According to the proposed report, the subcommittee “directed the Staff of the Legislative Services Agency (‘LSA’) to conduct background research related to sexual harassment prevention and prepare proposed policy language for review by the Subcommittee.†LSA’s research yielded four findings, including:
- “Legislators with oversight over legislative staff have existing policies that expressly prohibit sexual harassment of a legislative employee by a legislator and that include the processes and procedures for filing and investigating a complaint;â€
- The Indiana Constitution, House and Senate rules and state statute “protect employees, legislators, and other persons interacting with legislators from unlawful sexual conduct;â€
- Indiana Code section 2-2.2-3-9 “treats sexual harassment prevention instruction as an entirely separate subject from ethics instruction†and does not require additional training for members of the ethics committees, and;
- “The General Assembly has a legal duty to protect legislative employees from sexual harassment by legislators.â€
According to the report’s findings, the House and Senate employee handbooks prohibit sexual harassment and provide that reports of such harassment should be made to the chief of staff, chief counsel or clerk of the House, and the immediate supervisor, majority chief of staff or secretary of the Senate. LSA and Indiana’s fourth legislative employer, the Indiana Lobbyist Registration Commission, include similar provisions in their personnel rules.
The subcommittee’s first recommendation would build on those existing policies by amending the language in the House and Senate codes of ethics to prescribe a clear reporting process. In the House, sexual harassment complaints would be made to the speaker, while Senate complaints would be made to the president pro tempore. If either the speaker or the president pro tem are the subject of the complaint, then a complainant would contact the majority caucus chair in the appropriate chamber.
The amended ethics rules would further explicitly define sexual harassment as “unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal, nonverbal, or physical conduct of a sexual nature by a member†that is made as a quid pro quo employment expectation or creates a hostile work environment. The proposed language would also explicitly prohibit retaliation for either filing a sexual harassment complaint or participating in a subsequent investigation, and would require confidentiality for the complainant/victim “to the extent possible.â€
The House and Senate ethics committees would be permitted to investigate complaints made to the legislative leaders. The subcommittee report notes that current Indiana statute requires the ethics committees to base a finding of sexual harassment on “competent and substantial evidence,†and subcommittee members urge the Legislative Council to approve the continued use of that standard. The subcommittee also notes that while independent investigators may sometimes be beneficial, the decision to use an outside investigator falls within the discretion of the ethics committees.
Looking to the second recommendation, subcommittee members are urging the council to further amend I.C. 2-2.2-3-9 – the statute amended in 1309 – to merge the mandatory sexual harassment prevention training into the mandatory legislative ethics training. A proposed bill attached to the report would add language requiring that, “The ethics instruction required in this section must cover this article, the house and senate ethics rules, and other relevant statutes. Of the two (2) total hours of ethics instruction required between general elections, one (1) hour must be devoted to sexual harassment prevention instruction.â€
Further, the subcommittee is recommending that members of the ethics committees receive additional training “designed to assist them in their responsibilities.â€
“This training should focus, at a minimum, on how to end disrespectful conduct, how to handle complaints, the investigation process, anti-retaliation rules, and related matters,†the report says.
HEA 1309 also required that House Speaker Brian Bosma, former House Minority Leader Terry Goodin, former Senate President pro tem David Long and Senate Minority Leader Tim Lanane each appoint a legislator to serve on the subcommittee solely for the purpose of developing the sexual harassment recommendations. According to a Bosma spokeswoman, those four appointed legislators – Reps. Holli Sullivan and Cherrish Pryor and Sens. Liz Brown and Karen Tallian – met in executive session Nov. 7 and adopted the report.
Indiana Lawyer attempted to watch the Nov. 7 meeting via the General Assembly’s livestream, but was told that because the meeting was an executive session, it was not open to the public.
Bosma’s spokeswoman also said the Legislative Council has not yet set a date to consider the recommendations, and she did not comment on whether the eventual meeting will be held by the Nov. 20 deadline.
Indiana’s King, Lanza Repeat as Big Ten Swimmers of the Week
For the second-straight week, Indiana University’s Lilly King and Vini Lanza were named Big Ten Swimmers of the Week, the league office announced on Wednesday. The honor is the third this season for King and the second for Lanza.
At the ACC/Big Ten Challenge this past weekend, King helped the Big Ten squad win, earning two individual victories and two relay wins. The Evansville, Ind. native won the 100 (57.85) and 200 breaststroke (2:06.81) in dominant fashion, posting the fastest times in the nation in both events. The times were also NCAA A cut times.
In the relays, King helped the Big Ten win both the 200 medley relay (1:34.96) and the 400 medley relay (3:25.71) against the ACC.
On the men’s side, Lanza was a key part of the Big Ten’s victory over the ACC. Lanza won both the 100 (46.06) and 200 butterfly (1:42.67) with the fastest times in the country this season. Both times were also NCAA B cuts.
Lanza also helped the league win both the 200 medley relay (1:24.46) and the 800 freestyle relay (6:18.68) at the ACC/Big Ten Challenge.
The No. 2/13 Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams will host the IU Invitational beginning on Thursday, Nov. 15 at the Counsilman Billingsley Aquatic Center. The three-day meet will run through Saturday, Nov. 17.
Rickey named D2CCA MW Region Player of the Year USI has four named All-MW Region
The Eagles had three players – junior forward Eric Ramirez (Vincennes, Indiana), senior defender Kent Katzman (Spring Hill, Tennessee), freshman defender Colten Walsh (St. Louis, Missouri) — named to the D2CCA All-Midwest Region second team. The All-Region honor is the second of Ramirez’s career and the first for Katzman and Walsh.
Ramirez, who also was named first-team All-GLVC in October, finished the fall second on the team with 18 points on eight goals and two assists. Ramirez also follows Rickey with three game-winning goals in 2018.
Katzman, USI’s 2018 team captain, and Walsh spearheaded the Eagles defensive back line that had a 0.98 team goals against average and helped post eight shutouts. Walsh also was third on the team in scoring with 11 points on four goals and three assists.
The Eagles complete the 2018 campaign with a 13-4-1record; ranked 15th nationally; their first GLVC regular season crown since 1990; their highest regional ranking since 1982; and their third appearance in the NCAA II Tournament. USI also hosted their first NCAA II Regional since 1982.
Mercer steps down as USI Volleyball head coach
University of Southern Indiana Athletics announced the resignation of Volleyball Head Coach Leah Mercer. Mercer steps down after 15 seasons as head coach with a record of 236-196.
USI will conduct a national search to fill the vacancy. “We will begin the search immediately,†said USI Director of Athletics Jon Mark Hall. “We will be looking for a coach to build on the successes of this talented group of athletes.â€
A 2002 USI graduate and student athlete, Mercer was a two-time ALL-GLVC performer and was named the GLVC Coach of the Year in 2013.
“We appreciate Coach Mercer’s many contributions to her University both as a student athlete and as a coach,†stated Hall.
Attorney General Curtis Hill files lawsuit against opioid giant Purdue Pharma
Attorney General Curtis Hill filed a lawsuit today against opioid manufacturer Purdue Pharma Inc., Purdue Pharma, L.P., and The Purdue Frederick Company (collectively “Purdue Pharmaâ€). Purdue Pharma’s opioid products include the drug OxyContin. The lawsuit alleges that Purdue Pharma’s conduct in misrepresenting the risks and benefits of opioids played a key role in the opioid crisis in Indiana.
“Following my office’s thorough investigation of this company’s activity in Indiana, this lawsuit demands Purdue Pharma answer for its violations of Indiana law,†Attorney General Hill said. “This litigation is one additional tool in the state’s arsenal to combat the opioid crisis. My office is committed to holding companies that engage in unfair, abusive, and deceptive practices in Indiana accountable for their misconduct. The lawsuit against Purdue Pharma is the culmination of nearly two years of exhaustive investigation, depositions of former employees, interviews of prescribers across the state, and thorough review of company documents.â€
The allegations against Purdue Pharma depict the lengths to which the company sought to increase profits by promoting its opioids in Indiana, including by:
- minimizing or denying the risk of addiction;
- exaggerating the benefits of the use of opioids for treatment of chronic pain;
- denying or failing to disclose the increased dangers of opioids at higher doses;
- targeting elderly and opioid-naïve patients to create a new market of long-term customers;
- spreading the above misrepresentations to Indiana’s medical community and to consumers; and
- engaging in an elaborate deception by enlisting what appeared to be independent entities carrying neutral information that were actually paid, funded or otherwise controlled by Purdue to publicize statements known to be unsupported by facts or scientific research.
The lawsuit, filed in Marion County on behalf of the State of Indiana, alleges that Purdue violated Indiana’s Deceptive Consumer Sales Act; the Prescription Drug Discount and Benefit Cards Statute; the False Claims Act; and the Medicaid False Claims Act. The complaint seeks maximum penalties, treble damages, costs and an order directing Purdue Pharma to stop its unlawful conduct.
The state is aided in its lawsuit by Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC and Zimmerman Reed LLP.
If you or someone you know is struggling with addiction, you can locate treatment providers in Indiana by calling 211 or 1-800-682-HELP(4357).
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BREAKING NEWS:Â Two Arrests Made In Connection With East Side Shots Fired Call
 Two Arrests Made In Connection With East Side Shots Fired Call
Evansville Police arrested two men after a 911 call for shots fired on Tuesday on the East Side. Several calls came in around 2:40 pm in the area of E Virginia and Kimber Ln.
The Police were told the passenger in a black Nissan SUV was shooting at a white passenger car. The driver of the passenger car was not injured and was able to provide additional info to investigators.
Patrol officers spotted the suspect vehicle near Highway 41 and Lincoln Ave a short time later. When they pulled the car over, both occupants ran from the car. Both were caught after foot chases. The passenger tossed a handgun onto a garage as he fled. The gun was recovered and was the same caliber as the shell casings recovered at the shooting scene.
Police arrested Life Dismuke (24) and Adarius Armand (23). Both charged with 4 counts of Criminal Recklessness and 1 count of Resisting Law Enforcement. Armand, who was the passenger and who police believe fired multiple shots during the incident, also faces a Possession of a Firearm without a Permit with a Prior Conviction.
Police believe the shooting was in retaliation for a recent drug deal where counterfeit money was used to purchase $100 worth of marijuana.