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AG Curtis Hill calls for congressional action to preserve the essence of DACA

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Attorney General Curtis Hill has written an op-ed calling upon Congress to take action to preserve some variation of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy, which was created by executive memorandum during the Obama administration.

“No one can credibly suggest that individuals brought as children to the United States by adults illegally crossing U.S. borders are themselves guilty of any wrongdoing,” Attorney General Hill writes. “Having grown up in the United States, they are as ‘American’ as any one of us.”

The full op-ed is attached. Any outlet choosing to publish this op-ed is asked, as a courtesy, to please inform Deputy Communications Director Bill McCleery at bill.mccleery@atg.in.gov. Thank you.

Uninsured motorist ruling for passenger crash victim reversed

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Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

A man who won a judgment that he was covered by his auto insurance’s uninsured motorist policy after a crash that left him a quadriplegic lost the ruling in his favor Wednesday. The Indiana Court of Appeals decision could cost him millions of dollars that a jury awarded in a separate trial.

The appellate panel ruled for Gregory Smith’s insurer in Progressive Southeastern Insurance Co. v. Gregory Smith, et al., 18A-PL-312, in a case in which Smith was a passenger in his own insured truck. According to court records from the underlying litigation, Smith and Nolan Clayton were intoxicated after drinking at an Indianapolis Stacked Pickle bar in February 2016, and the bar called a cab for them. However, as their ride was pulling into the parking lot, Smith and Clayton decided to drive themselves, with Smith asking Clayton to drive his truck. Clayton crashed, permanently disabling Smith.

Smith sued Clayton and his insurer, Allstate, and a Marion County jury in December awarded Smith $35 million.

In the instant case, Smith’s insurer, Progressive, filed a complaint for declaratory judgment, asking Marion Superior Judge Timothy Oakes for a determination that, according to the terms of its insurance policy with Smith, he was not entitled to coverage under the policy’s uninsured-motorist provisions for injuries sustained during an accident while being a passenger in his vehicle.

Oakes granted summary judgment in favor of Smith. “On December 14, 2017, without a hearing, the trial court signed Smith’s proposed findings and summarily granted judgment to him and against Progressive,” appellate Judge Patricia Riley noted. “On January 16, 2018, Progressive filed its motion to correct error, which the trial court denied the following day.”

But the COA panel found the trial court erred in ruling for Smith. The panel noted that he had settled out of court with Nolan’s insurer, Allstate, which tendered its full policy limits to Smith for the damages Clayton caused in the crash.

“(T)he unambiguous language of the policy does not extend UM coverage to Smith’s bodily injuries sustained in an accident caused by his own truck because Smith’s truck is a covered auto as defined by the policy, and thus not included in the uninsured motor vehicle definition which would trigger coverage of the policy,” Riley wrote. “In other words, no vehicle that Smith owns or insures can ever be an ‘uninsured motor vehicle’ for UM coverage purpose.

“(W)e hold that the trial court erred by concluding that Smith is entitled to receive payment from Progressive for his bodily injury under his insurance policy’s UM coverage, where his injury arose from a single-vehicle accident involving his insured vehicle and the driver’s liability insurance covered Smith’s bodily injury damages,” Riley wrote for the panel.

The COA found Smith’s policy unambiguously excluded Smith’s truck from UM coverage and “the trial court incorrectly applied the law to the facts.” The unanimous opinion was joined by Chief Judge Nancy Vaidik and Judge James S. Kirsch.

Gov. Holcomb Public Schedule for October 11

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Below find Indiana Gov. Eric J. Holcomb’s public schedule for October 11, 2018.

Thursday, October 11: Workforce Development Announcement

WHO:              Gov. Holcomb

Danny Lopez, Chairman of the Governor’s Workforce Cabinet

Beth Cobert, CEO of Skillful (A Markle Initiative)

Mary Snapp, Corporate Vice President and Head of Microsoft Philanthropies

WHAT:            The governor will give remarks.

WHEN:            10 a.m., Thursday, October 11

WHERE:          Indiana State Library

History Reference Room

315 W. Ohio St.

Indianapolis, IN 46202

 

S. New York Human Remains

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The victim from yesterday’s investigation has been identified as Monika Roberts, age 35, of Maryland. An autopsy has been completed and it was determined that she died of a single gunshot wound to the head.  The death has been ruled a homicide.  The Henderson Police Department along with the Evansville Police Department are together investigating the death as a homicide and that investigation is ongoing.

 

Investigating the Death of a Pedestrian

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The Vanderburgh County Coroners Office and the Evansville Police Department are investigating the death of a pedestrian who was struck near the intersection of Washington Ave and Weinbach Ave. the victim has been identified as James R. Adams , age 75, of Evansville died at St. Vincent Hospital at 19:08 hours after being taken there for treatment.

“IS IT TRUE” OCTOBER 10, 2018

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We hope that today’s ”IS IT TRUE” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Do you agree with Councilman Jonathan Weaver that the City of Evansville is having serious cash flow problems?

IS IT TRUE that City Council voted 8 to 1, passing a whopping $395 million budget for 2019? …that the 2019 budget is a 7% increase over this year’s budget?  …that City Council give city employees a 2% raise for this coming year?…that Finance Chairman and Councilman Jonathan Weaver was the only member to vote against the 2019 budget, saying the current (2018) budget is already $13 million over budget so far this year? …for this, we give Mr. Weaver two (2) thumbs up for standing up for the taxpayers and voting against 2019 in its current form?

IS IT TRUE we also give two (2) thumbs down to the 8 members of City Council for voting on the 2019 budget in its current form? …we are told that many people are disappointed in City Council members G. John Hayden (R), CPA and Justin Elpers (R) for not taking a stronger stance against the 2019 City budget?

IS IT TRUE we can’t wait to read the State Board of Accounts financial audit that was just completed on the City of Evansville? …we expect the soon to be release SBOA audit could prove to be an embarrassment to the Mayor and the members of City Council who voted for the approval of the 2019 City budget?

IS IT TRUE that County Attorney, Joe Harrison, Barnes & Thornburg Attorney, Tom Pittman, and County Commissioner, Ben Shoulders appeared before Evansville City Council to ask for their approval of a Bond Ordinance within the “Burkhardt TIF” area in order to proceed with numerous road, bridge and trail projects? …that numerous community leaders, engineers, neighborhood associations, residents, taxpayers and “Trail Coalition” board members spoke out in favor of this project?

IS IT TRUE that the only opposing public comment about this project came from County Councilman, James Raben?  …that County Councilman Raben called the “Burkhardt TIF District Trails Project” a waste of money and he also alleges that the entire Vanderburgh County Council, opposed this project?  …that the Evansville City snubbed Mr. Raben’s request to reject this project and voted to pass this Ordinance 7-2?

IS IT TRUE that the two “NO” votes against the “Burkhardt TIF District Trails Project” were City Councilmen Justin Elpers (R) and G. John Hayden (R), CPA? …that the ‘Burkhardt TIF District Trails Project” focus is on roads, bridges, infrastructure, connectivity, quality of life and direct trails that will be the pathways to Deaconess Sports Park?
IS IT TRUE we are pleased that the Vanderburgh County Council forced the soon to retire Airport Manager Doug Joest to add back the three cut Safety Officers salaries into the 2019 Airport budget?
IS IT TRUE  we have been told that the total number of Airport Safety Officers before the budget cut may have been 18? …the number of Safety Officers reported by the Airport Manager to the Vanderburgh County Council was 15? …if this is correct, could that the extra three (3) Safety Officials (Captains) have been listed as a different line item in the Airport budget?
IS IT TRUE we find it interesting that Mayor Winnecke sent a letter to the Vanderburgh County Council asking them to keep the three cut Safety Officers positions in the 2019 Airport budget? …since the Mayor appoints 3 of the 5 Airport board members he could have directed them to fix this problem themselves without going to County Council?
IS IT TRUE we also find it interesting why didn’t members of the Vanderburgh County Council didn’t take the Airport board to task for hiring the new Airport manager, Nate Hahn without advertising this position in a local or national publication?
IS IT TRUE that the official costs to relocate the LST 325 next to Tropicana is more than the $3.9 million projected by the Evansville City Council and Mayor Lloyd Winnecke earlier this year?
IS IT TRUE that the Port Authority Chairman Pat Wathen said LST relocation bids went over by $1 to $1.2 million?  …that this project was originally estimated by city officials to cost around $3.9 million, with the city contributing nearly $2.8 million?  … the other $1 million would come from other funding sources? …because of cost overruns, this project has to be rebid? …if the costs for this project can’t be reduced we wonder how the City will come up with the extra money to pay for it? …we consider this to be another developing story that the local mainstream media won’t follow-ups on?
Footnote: City-County Observer Comment Policy.  Be kind to people. No personal attacks or harassment will not be tolerated and shall be removed from our site.
We understand that sometimes people don’t always agree and discussions may become a little heated.  The use of offensive language, insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site.

 

 

 

 

Senator Young Explains Kavanaugh Vote

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Senator Young Explains Kavanaugh Vote

Staff Report

TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – U.S. Sen. Todd Young, R-Indiana, said Friday he believes Dr. Christine Blasey Ford suffered “some trauma” and was the victim of misconduct.

But, Young added, “that misconduct was something Judge (Brett) Kavanaugh was in no way responsible for.”

Young spoke to reporters by conference call Friday morning. He reaffirmed that he will vote to move Kavanaugh’s nomination forward and will vote to confirm the judge to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Young said he supported Kavanaugh’s nomination because the judge is a constitutional originalist. The senator cited the 300 opinions Kavanaugh issued from the bench and said the legal reasoning in a dozen of them had been adopted by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Young said he was glad the Federal Bureau of Investigation did a supplementary investigation into Ford’s allegation that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when they both were teenagers.

“Those are very serious allegations and they needed to be investigated,” Young said.

But he said the FBI’s investigation didn’t provide corroboration of Ford’s charges. Democrats and other critics have charged that the investigation, which was limited to interviewing nine people and didn’t include either Ford or Kavanaugh, was not thorough.

“It was thorough enough for me,” Young said of the FBI report.

The senator also bemoaned the partisan nature of the confirmation battle.

“I’m not proud of what has occurred in the United States Senate,” Young said.

“The search for truth became a search-and-destroy mission.”

Less than hour after the telephone press conference, the Senate voted, 51-49, on partisan lines to close debate on Kavanaugh nomination. The vote for confirmation could come as early as Saturday.

FOOTNOTE: TheStatehouseFile.com is a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

 

Autopsy Scheduled Wednesday For Body Found In Evansville

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Autopsy Scheduled Wednesday For Body Found In Evansville

A gruesome discovery is causing concern for people in one Evansville neighborhood.

A tip led Evansville police to the backyard of a home on South New York avenue.

When police arrived they discovered a body lying in the backyard.

“We sent our officers and our detective over to try to verify that information, and we did find what we believe to be a body,” says Evansville police captain Stephanie Cox.

After getting a search warrant for the property EPD detectives made their way inside to search for answers as previously reported.

“There was no one in the home,” says Capt. Cox.

“They are going to be going through that with a fine tooth comb to process anything we think might possibly be there.”

Neighbors say the house has been empty for years.

Right now, police say they aren’t able to confirm the gender, age or race of the person they found.

So there are a lots of questions surrounding the circumstances of how the body got there in the first place.

And often times neighbors can help fill in some of the gaps in these investigations.

“We want to talk to that person as well as everyone in the neighborhood too see if they seen anything, that could lead us to who this person might be and what happened to them,” says Cox.

Neighbors like Bill Moss say they are concerned.

“It’s horrifying to that you live so close to so much chaos going on right now.”

Detectives are starting to go over evidence recovered from the house.

Police are also working to compare any recent missing persons reports to see if today’s discovery could be linked to any of those cases.

Vanderburgh county coroner Steve Lockyear is investigating the discovery.

An autopsy is scheduled Wednesday at 1 p.m.