The family of 18 year old Shamal Daniel is asking the public for help locating him. Daniel was last seen in Evansville on August 1st. He is know the frequent the area of Riverside and Lodge.
A missing person report is on file with the Evansville Police Department. Anyone with information is asked to call EPD at 812-436-7979 or 911.
Advisory: Family of missing teen asking for info on his whereabouts
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.
Joseph J. Zack: Possession of a narcotic drug (Level 6 Felony), Possession of a controlled substance (Class A misdemeanor), Possession of paraphernalia (Class C misdemeanor)
Willie James Land Jr.: Dealing in a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony)
Christopher Chrishon Gilford: Theft (Level 6 Felony), Unlawful possession of a firearm by a domestic batterer (Class A misdemeanor), Unlawful possession of a firearm by a domestic batterer (Class A misdemeanor), Unlawful possession of a firearm by a domestic batterer (Class A misdemeanor), Dealing in marijuana (Class A misdemeanor)
John Rex Exline: Possession of a narcotic drug (Level 6 Felony), Possession of a narcotic drug (Level 6 Felony)
Austin J. Gambrel: Operating a vehicle as an habitual traffic violator (Level 6 Felony), Leaving the scene of an accident with bodily injury (Class A misdemeanor)
Antoine Lamar Collier: Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life (Level 5 Felony)
James Edward Coon Jr.: Strangulation (Level 6 Felony)
Brittany Michelle Egan: Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)
Teisha Nicole Thompson: Operating a vehicle as an habitual traffic violator (Level 6 Felony)
Isaiah G. Marion: Domestic battery (Level 5 Felony), Strangulation (Level 6 Felony)
All Bridgmohan and Cox
- Jockey wins six races, including teaming with meet-leading trainer to take stakes with Mr. Misunderstood, Arklow
- $25K claim Jazzy Times takes Turf Sprint for Hawley, Kennedy
- I’m Betty G gives Tyler Gaffalione first win at Ellis Park
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Shaun Bridgmohan owned the inaugural Kentucky Downs Preview Day at Ellis Park from the start, winning six races on the program, including four for the meet’s leading trainer, Brad Cox. Two of the wins Bridgmohan and Cox teamed up for came in co-featured stakes with Arklow in the $100,000 Kentucky Downs Preview Calumet Farm Turf Cup and Mr. Misunderstood in the $100,000 Kentucky Downs Preview Tourist Mile. Bridgmohan swept two separate Pick Three sequences with wins in the first three races, as well as races six through eight, which were bookended by the stakes.“In this game you need stock, and when you’ve got it, I still know how to use it,†Bridgmohan said. ““Brad is having an unbelievable meet and he’s got some really nice horses. It doesn’t matter where it is. A six win day at any track feels good, no matter where it is. And it certainly feels good to win it here. I’ve won six at the Fair Grounds and six at Aqueduct. This is the third time and they all are special.â€Four $100,000 turf stakes were run for the first time as part of Kentucky Downs Preview Day, funded by the flush purse account (and Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund supplements) at Kentucky Downs. Each race was positioned as a springboard to its corresponding Kentucky Downs stakes event in early September.“I’m glad they created this Preview Day,†Cox said. “It was a great day. Both horses ran really well. Obviously the turf course is firm, so you needed to be somewhat close, so the jock recognized that from the earlier races and throughout the meet. I’m proud of both horses. They ran the way they’ve been training. It’s been a good meet at Ellis so far; we like racing there. It’s a good spot in the summer time for Kentucky racing, for sure.â€ARKLOW WINS KENTUCKY DOWNS PREVIEW CALUMET FARM TURF CUPBridgmohan made it a four-bagger aboard heavily favored Arklow in the Kentucky Downs Preview Calumet Farm Turf Cup at 1 1/4 miles, a prelude to the $750,000 Calumet Farm Kentucky Turf Cup (G3) in five weeks. A Grade 2 winner enjoying a bit of class relief after solid efforts against the likes of Yoshida and Synchrony earlier this year, Arklow tracked a soft early pace before being put to a long drive by Bridgmohan and getting up in the final stages to win by a head over pacesetter Zapperini. The top two were 1 1/4-lengths clear of 2016 Queen’s Plate hero Sir Dudley Digges in third.“He’s a big ol’ horse with a giant stride to him,†Bridgmohan said. “Brad had talked to me about it and he just basically told me, ‘Don’t leave him too much to do.’ I warmed him up so he’d be on his toes when he left there. We could see there wasn’t a whole lot of pace in there. I adjusted a little bit what I needed to do. He laid close and still had enough at the end to get the job done.â€Arklow won last year’s American Turf (G2) at Churchill Downs but failed to fire in two subsequent tries and got a long break before starting his 4-year-old year with an allowance win at Fair Grounds. He was second in the Mervin Muniz Memorial (G2) at Fair Grounds, fourth in the Turf Classic (G1) at Churchill Downs, then fourth as the favorite in the Stars N Stripes (G3) at Arlington Park before finding the right spot today.“I really liked him being up in the race today; he’s never quite been that close,†Cox said by phone. “I was glad to see him a little more forwardly placed going longer. I think he’s a horse who could be very effective in the older horse division – a mile-and-a-quarter and beyond on grass – the rest of this year and hopefully into next year. I was very proud of him.â€Tessa Bisha, local assistant to Cox, saddled Arklow.“I was worried because even though the pace was so slow, it’s still throwing a horse like him off their game when they are that forwardly placed,†she said. “But when I saw he had his head down running, I said, ‘Oh yes, this big guy’s got it.’ He did look like he surged ahead just enough at the wire, and he had his head down, too. I love this big horse. He’s so cool. He’s just really mellow and tries really hard. That’s all it takes to be cool in my eyes.â€Arklow returned $3.80, $2.60, and $2.60, while Zapperini paid $6.40 and $4.80, and Sir Dudley Digges was worth $4.40.Zapperini, an allowance winner here last month, led through fractions of 25.56, 50.84, and 1:14.81 before yielding in the final sixteenth.“He ran too well to lose,†said Travis Foley, assistant to his father, Greg Foley, who thought this spot might be easier than taking on Mr. Misunderstood at a flat mile. “We’ve always wanted to run the mile and a half type races. He just kind of tailed off there last year, so we ended up not taking those shots. But he’s bred to go forever, and we didn’t think that would stop him.â€â€œThat’s what you call a really, really, really tough beat,†said Zapperini’s rider Gabriel Saez. “He beat me running, that’s all I can say.â€Arklow earned $60,105 to raise his career earnings to $420,932. Connections for both of the top two finishers indicated they would expect to move on to the Calumet Farm Kentucky Turf Cup.All Right rounded out the superfecta, followed by Rated R Superstar, Tizzarunner, Flatlined, and Harv Won’t Tap.MR. MISUNDERSTOOD DOMINATES KENTUCKY DOWNS PREVIEW TOURIST MILEMr. Misunderstood ran like the heaviest favorite on the card should, tracking the pace and swinging three-wide before edging past the leaders to land a professional win in the $100,000 Kentucky Downs Preview Tourist Mile by 1 1/4 lengths. Shaun Bridgmohan rode the winner, his sixth on the card and second for trainer Brad Cox.“Mr. Misunderstood just keeps on keeping on,†Cox said. “He’s ultra-consistent. I guess you could say we took a little bit of a drop today, but that’s the way it fell on the calendar. We thought it made a little more sense trying to get to Kentucky Downs through Ellis Park versus Saratoga.â€Siem Riep set the early fractions of 24.51, 48.11, and 1:11.21 before flattening out in the stretch but still holding second over Galton in third.Mr. Misunderstood, a 4-year-old Archarcharch gelding, was last seen winning the Grade 2 Wise Dan Stakes at Churchill Downs in June. He earned $59,640 for today’s win to raise his career earnings to $634,354 and improve his overall record to 18-11-2-0.“We knew coming in that we were going to be tough,†said Staton Flurry, the 28-year-old owner of Mr. Misunderstood who hails from Hot Springs, Ark. “I don’t want to sound cocky or overconfident. But when you’re 1-to-1 in the morning line, you know you’re supposed to win.“He’s been running pretty tough since August of last year. We gave him about a 45-day break after the Illinois Derby. We brought him back a little sooner than we wanted for the (Louisiana Downs) Prelude last year. But I said, ‘I want to win the Prelude and get in the Super Derby.’ That’s what we did, and Brad went along with what I kind of wanted to do. And it’s been magical ever since. This was his 10th turf win (out of 13 races). He’s been just something you dream about.â€Cox indicated Mr. Misunderstood would be pointed to the $750,000 Tourist Mile at Kentucky Downs, as would his other stakes runners from the Preview Day program, Arklow and Will Call.“That’s totally what all three of them are doing, we’re pointing them all for the Kentucky Downs races,†he said.The full order of finish was completed by Parlor, One Mean Man, Nice Not Nice, Bondurant, Cowboy Culture and Dimension.JAZZY TIMES UPSETS KENTUCKY DOWNS PREVIEW TURF SPRINTJazzy Times, claimed for $25,000 in May by owner-trainer Wes Hawley, stalked a blistering pace and surged to the front in the final strides to win the inaugural running of the $100,000 Kentucky Downs Preview Turf Sprint. The 5-year-old gelding won the 5 1/2-furlong turf event by a half-length in 1:00.91 – .39 off the course record – to notch his first career stakes score.Extravagant Kid, a multiple stakes winner in Florida, held on for second in a photo with Maniacal. The second- and third-place finishers had battled early through fractions of 21.20 and 43.58 seconds.Last month Jazzy Times won for the first time in more than a year when Hawley tried him on the grass in a $25,000 claiming race at Indiana Grand. Twenty-four-year-old Ty Kennedy was aboard for that race and got the return mount today for what turned out to be his first Ellis Park stakes victory.“He’s such a good grass horse, as Wes had claimed him to be,†Kennedy said. “He broke really great. I just left him alone and let him settle himself. He did great. He was in the pocket, everything was good, and as soon as he saw daylight, he did the rest. I hung on and just waited for the wire.â€Jazzy Times paid $32.40, $14, and $6.80, while Extravagant Kid paid $6.60 and $4.20, and Manical returned $6.60.Hawley, who has been known to back his horses at the windows, said there was no need to bet Jazzy Times today, even though he thought he had a chance.“I didn’t have to bet because I own him,†Hawley said. “I just won $60,000!â€The $500,000 Kentucky Downs Turf Sprint (G3) could be next for Jazzy Times, though the $300,000 Turf Monster (G3) at Parx will also be under consideration, as will a $100,000 starter allowance he’s eligible for at Kentucky Downs billed as a prep for the 2018 Claiming Crown at Canterbury Park.A son of Discreetly Mine, Jazzy Times turned heads on Kentucky Derby Day in 2016 when he broke his maiden on debut for Bob Baffert. Later that year he hit the board against older horses in the Gr. 1 Santa Anita Sprint Championship and ran last in the Grade 1 Malibu behind a Mind Your Biscuits-Sharp Azteca exacta. He spent most of 2017 with trainer Brad Cox before being claimed by Steve Hobby, who lost the gelding to Hawley for $25,000 at Churchill Downs.“I said the day I claimed him he might be another Chamberlain Bridge,†Hawley said, referring to the turf sprinter who was claimed for $35,000 before earning nearly $2 million and winning a Breeders’ Cup race. “I just had a gut feeling he was going to like the grass, and I go along on a lot of gut feelings.â€Jazzy Times earned $60,105 for today’s win, bringing his lifetime earnings to $301,629.After the top three, the order of finish was completed by Fort Fortitude, Louisiana Brown, Angaston, even-money favorite Will Call, and Restless Remember. Downtown Cowboy was scratched.I’M BETTY G TAKES KENTUCKY DOWNS PREVIEW LADIES TURF STAKESI’m Betty G led every step in the $100,000 Kentucky Downs Preview Ladies Turf Stakes, winning by an easy one length in the prep for next month’s $500,000 Kentucky Downs Ladies Turf (G3). The 4-year-old Into Mischief filly has been virtually untouchable in three straight victories for trainer Mike Maker.“The filly broke good,†said jockey Tyler Gaffalione, who was riding at Ellis for the first time. “She’s always shown a lot of speed so I didn’t want to take anything away from her. When she made the lead, she got real comfortable and settled nicely. When I asked her for run coming into the stretch, she really kicked on.â€I’m Betty G set unpressured fractions of 23.84, 46.52, and 1:09.46 before drawing away in the stretch.English Affair got up for second under Brian Hernandez Jr., a neck ahead of Bonnie Arch and Chris Landeros in third.“Black type – that’s what it’s all about,†said Jack Bohannan, assistant to Rusty Arnold, trainer of runner-up English Affair. “That was great. The filly probably wants to go farther than that and not lay as close. But Brian did a great job, great trip. Mission accomplished, black type.â€Added Hernandez: “We had a perfect trip from the 1 hole like that. The way the turf course has been playing you want to be close and save all the ground. Fortunately we were able to save all the ground and able to get up for second.â€I’m Betty G paid $5.80, $4, and $2.80, while English Affair returned $8.20 and $5.20, and Ellis Park Turf Stakes winner Bonnie Arch was worth $4.40 to show.The full order of finish was completed by Sailor’s Valentine, Res Ipsa, Noted and Quoted, Now Power, Tamit, Excessivespending, Lovely Bernadette, and Bridgmohan’s mount in the finale, Brooks House, who went off at 21-1 and checked in last.
“READERS FORUM” AUGUST 6 2018
We hope that today’s “Readers Forumâ€Â 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?
 WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?
Todays“Readers Poll†question is: Do you feel that the new owners of Ellis Park are going to invest the money to make the track and casino more upscale and customer friendly?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS†and “LOCAL SPORTSâ€.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.
If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us City-CountyObserver@live.com.
FOOTNOTE: City-County Observer Comment Policy. Â 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. Â The use of offensive language, insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site.
Commentary: The Landscape And The Lesson It Teaches
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.comÂ
OUTSIDE MOAB, Utah – Sometimes, the earth speaks to us.
When it does, it offers a lesson.
I’m in Canyonlands National Park. I stand now on a mountain that once was an island. I look out at a high desert that once was covered by water.
Clouds and haze cover the sky. They diffuse the sunlight, making it softer. It’s warm and dry. The temperature at the top of the mountains slides from the low 90s down to the high 80s. Down in the valley in nearby Moab, it’s 100 degrees or more.
The canyons below me stretch to the horizon and beyond. They’re broken up only by other mountains, by natural spires and spikes thrust high into the air and by improbable arches that seem otherworldly.
The soft sunlight illuminates the red rock of the mountains, the reds, the browns and the tans of the canyons and the near-black of the deep crevices. Elsewhere, there are patches of green in varying shades and an occasional surprising blue.
I’m not alone on the mountain that was an island.
Others have come to look at these sights. They have traveled here from many places.
Around me, I hear people speaking in French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Mandarin and some Eastern European tongues I cannot identify with precision.
They point at sites and talk with each other, their voices hushed but fired with excitement. They take pictures. They pose for selfies.
One little boy from China walks toward the vista, breaks into a scrambled chase when he sees a tiny lizard scurrying across the ground and then stops, stunned, when he comes close enough to see the vast stretches of canyons, crevices and mountains before him. His mother catches up to him, takes his hand and they stand, breathless, as they look out over the landscape before them.
That is the way it is with all who visit.
At some point, the chattering, the picture-taking and the posing stop, and everyone stands for a moment in stunned contemplation of a place created by the power of nature and the unceasing inertia of time.
What a force time is.
These mountains, these canyons, these spires, these arches and these crevices were carved over millions of years. They were produced by disruptions in the landscape more powerful than any weapon yet created by humankind.
Once these canyons were covered by fresh water and the spot where I stand was an island in a vast lake.
Now it is all rock, sand, sediment and silt, pounded into its current shape by the elements and the weight of time.
Not far from the spot where I stand, one can find petroglyphs, rock art carved into the walls of mountains and canyons by Native Americans. Some of the art is 3,000 years old. The newer petroglyphs are 200 to 400 years old.
It matters not.
As these mountains and canyons measure time, 200 years or 400 years or even 3,000 years are but an instant, a puff of breath carried away by a wind that never slows or ceases.
I stand on this mountain that was an island and marvel at what this land has seen and known. It was here for millions of years before I was born. It will be here for untold generations after I have breathed my last and everyone and every earthly thing I have loved is as ancient and obscure as the primitive art carved into these walls of rock.
I look at the people around me. They come from many spots upon this globe. They speak different languages and pray to different gods than I do.
But for this moment – this brief, brief moment – we are linked by a deep appreciation of something so much larger and more enduring than ourselves, by a world that has such wonders in it.
Sometimes, the earth speaks to us.
It teaches us to walk through this world – to live this life – with a humble heart.
FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits†WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
COA: 4th Amendment Rights Not Violated By Search Of Home
Katie Stancombe and Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
The Indiana Court of Appeals determined that a man’s Fourth Amendment rights were not violated during a search of his residence because law enforcement had ample reason to believe he was at the residence.
Officers arrived at William Stickrod’s residence in December 2016 to execute warrants to arrest him for failing to appear at court hearings in two criminal cases. Upon arrival, Jessica Caliz, Stickrod’s girlfriend, opened the door and informed officers that Stickrod was not there, but officers heard a “thud†coming from the house’s attached garage. Caliz had previously lied the officers about Stickrod’s whereabouts and found him in his garage, where they found him once again in December 2016.
The officers handcuffed Stickrod and, during a search of his person, discovered a glasses case in a pants pocket that contained a glass pipe and a small plastic bag containing .8 grams of methamphetamine.
Stickrod was subsequently charged with Level 5 and Level 6 felony possession of meth and Class C misdemeanor possession of paraphernalia. He filed a motion to suppress all evidence that the state obtained after entering the home, but the Tippecanoe Circuit Court denied the motion.
The trial court later imposed a sentence on all three counts and merged the Level 6 felony with the Level 5 felony after Stickrod was convicted at the separate jury and bench trials. On appeal, Stickrod argued the officers’ entry into his home violated his Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable search and seizure.
The appellate court cited Carpenter v. State, 974 N.E.2d 569 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012), which found officers did not violate Carpenter’s Fourth Amendment rights by approaching a house and looking in the window when they had a reasonable belief he was inside. The same was true in William P. Stickrod v. the State of Indiana, 79A04-1710-CR-2473, the appellate court found, noting the officer had ample reason to believe that Stickrod was present in that house on that night.
The fact that the officer knew Stickrod lived there because he had arrested Stickrod at that address a few weeks prior to the incident at issue, coupled with the purpose of executing arrest the warrant, led to the appellate court’s determination that entry into Stickrod’s house did not violate the Fourth Amendment, so the trial court did not err in admitting evidence the officers discovered on Stickrod’s person after entering the house.
Stickrod next argued the trial court denied his Sixth Amendment right to present a defense by barring Caliz’s testimony, but the appellate panel also rejected that argument. Stickrod’s attorney had informed the judge he believed Caliz would commit perjury on the stand, and “(p)preventing the presentation of perjured testimony on the stand is a legitimate and substantial interest,†Senior Judge Betty Barteau wrote.
But the appellate panel did agree a double jeopardy violation occurred in regard to Stickrod’s Level 5 and Level 6 felonies for possession of meth. It found that the trial court’s merger of the counts at sentencing failed to correct the problem, so the court remanded the case to vacate the Level 6 felony conviction.
LIBERAL MEDIA Newseum Sells ‘Fake News’ T-Shirts, Liberal Media Gets Mad
Newseum Sells ‘Fake News’ T-Shirts, Liberal Media Gets Mad
“This t-shirt doesn’t belong anywhere. It particularly doesn’t belong at the @Newseum, a place that celebrates journalism and has the First Amendment etched in stone outside its building,†Viser declared.
The article he links to details how the Newseum actually sells several hats and tee shirts with catchphrases from the president saying things such as  “Make America Great Again† and “You are very fake news.â€
But, when asked if these items were at all questionable for a museum celebrating the First Amendment, the Newseum said, “We recognize why you’re asking the question. As a nonpartisan organization, people with differing viewpoints feel comfortable visiting the Newseum, and one of our greatest strengths is that we champion not only of a free press but also of free speech,†dismissing the concern altogether.
FOOTNOTE: This article was posted by the City-County Observer without opinion, bias or editing.
ISP Conducts Seat Belt Checks In Certain Counties Throughout August
ISP Conducts Seat Belt Checks In Certain Counties Throughout August
Click It or Ticket is the law, and Illinois State Police will be out enforcing that law through August.
Illinois State Police (ISP) District 19 Commander, Captain Cory Ristvedt, announced the ISP will conduct Occupant Restraint Enforcement Patrols (OREP) in White, Hamilton, Saline, and Gallatin Counties during August.
OREPs allow the ISP to focus on safety belt and child safety seat laws. Illinois law requires all passenger riding in the front and back to be buckled up!
Safety belts are still one of the most effective safety devices in vehicles, estimated to save nearly 14,000 lives each year. Half of the vehicle occupants killed in a traffic crash were not properly buckled up. The objective of this program is to increase occupant restraint compliance through education, child seat inspections, and enforcement.