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Attorney General Curtis Hill Praises Court’s Ruling Against Claims Of ‘First Church of Cannabis’

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Attorney General Curtis Hill today praised a Marion Superior Court decision to grant final judgment in the state’s favor against a small group of marijuana enthusiasts operating in Indianapolis under the name “First Church of Cannabis.”

The pro-marijuana plaintiffs began calling themselves a church in 2015 in order to poke fun at Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), which they opposed, and to argue for the right to smoke pot as a matter of religious liberty. On this basis, the group then filed a lawsuit against state and local officials seeking relief from Indiana’s anti-marijuana statutes.

On Friday, the Marion Superior Court concluded that the “church” and its members cannot use “marijuana as a holy sacrament” or sell marijuana in their gift shop.

“It is compelling and appropriate to treat the illicit drug market in a unitary way,” the court stated in its ruling. “It would be impossible to combat illicit drug use and trade in a piecemeal fashion that allowed for a religious exception that would become ripe for abuse.”

Attorney General Hill said the court’s finding should bring closure to a pro-marijuana political crusade that turned into a legal stunt.

“I appreciate the court’s fidelity to both the law and to common sense,” Attorney General Hill said. “Indiana’s laws against the possession, sale and use of marijuana protect the health, safety and well-being of Hoosiers statewide. When the state has justifiable and compelling interests at stake, no one can evade the law simply by describing their illegal conduct as an exercise of religious faith.”

Long Balls Sink Otters In First-Half Finale

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The Evansville Otters were downed 8-4 by the Washington Wild Things Sunday evening in the rubber match of the series from Wild Things Park.

The Wild Things’ Carter McEachern hit a solo homer in the bottom of the first inning to put Washington up 1-0.

Jeff Gardner tied the game for the Otters in the second with a solo homer of his own, his sixth of the year.

Then in the bottom of the second, Connor Simonetti slugged a solo shot to put Washington back in front 2-1.

Washington struck for four runs in the fifth to increase their lead 6-1. James Harris blasted a three-run homer and Hector Roa followed up with an RBI single to cap off the four-run frame.

Evansville got one back in the top of the sixth when Travis Harrison drove home a run with a triple to right-center.

The Wild Things got that run back and one more in the bottom of the sixth. McEachern picked up his second RBI of the game with a single and Mick Fennel scored after a throwing error from Evansville catcher Joe DeLuca.

Two runs came across for the Otters in the top of the seventh. David Cronin singled home a run and Toby Thomas drove home a run on a fielder’s choice, but those were the final runs the Otters would muster.

Trevor Bradley picks up the win for Washington as he threw five innings allowing just one run on four hits and striking out five.

Evansville’s Randy Wynne is dealt his fifth loss of the season. Wynne was tagged for six runs across five innings on nine hits while striking out three.

The Otters head into the Frontier League All-Star Break with a 26-23 record and will resume action Friday, July 13 at the Normal Cornbelters.

Ellis Park Turf: Bonnie Arch edges I Remember Mama;

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In the wake of the 2008 stock market crash, Lindsay Bohannon found himself the sole owner in a filly named Archly, his partners wanting out. Because Archly was by Arch, whose son Blame had just handed the great racemare Zenyatta her only defeat in the 2010 Breeders’ Cup Classic at Churchill Downs, Bohannon decided to keep Archly and breed her.
Archly went 0 for 4 on the racetrack, earning $680. To date, she is Bohannon’s only broodmare and he so far races only her offspring in the name of Clarendon Stable. But Sunday at Ellis Park, Archly’s second foal, the 5-year-old Bonnie Arch, earned her first stakes victory in the $50,000 Ellis Park Turf, stalking the early pace and coming five wide under Chris Landeros to surge to a half-length victory over favored I Remember Mama.
“She’s doing good, getting some confidence. Her last race at Churchill was pretty impressive,” Landeros said of a June 14 second-level turf allowance victory. “I thought if she could parlay it over to today, she might have a good shot. She’s getting better. She’s starting to relax a little more. She’s kind of a big, aggressive filly; she’s hard on herself. But she takes me to some good spots, and she’s getting there.
“I was just biding my time. She’s a big filly. You have to get your motor running before you start making her move, she’s so big. But once she gets that stride, she has a good kick.”
Bonnie Arch covered 1 1/16 miles over the firm Wright Implement turf course in a fast 1:40.17, the last sixteenth-mile going in 5.90 seconds. She paid $10.60 win as the third choice in the field of eight fillies and mares.
It was another nose to British import Dubara, making her U.S. debut, with May Lily another head back. Bonnie Arch’s Ian Wilkes-trained stablemate Burma Road was yet another head back in fifth, beaten three-quarters of a length for everything.
“That was a good horse race. She tried, ran hard to the wire,” said Robby Albarado, rider of I Remember Mama. “I missed the break, just a little bit tardy, she got herself position well and was very responsive when I needed her. She took off, seemingly put away the winner turning for home, and they just came back and outrun us.”
Said Tommy Drury, I Remember Mama’s trainer, after waiting out the photo for second: “It was close. First time stakes company, I thought she stepped up and ran her race. We had every shot to win it in middle of the stretch, and the other horse just out-footed us a little bit.”
Bonnie Arch, a chestnut daughter of Regal Ransom, now is 4-2-2 in 18 starts, earning $157,882. It was her third start of 2018, which started with a seventh-place finish sprinting over soft turf at Keeneland and then the Churchill victory, in which she beat May Lily.
“She’s just continued to improve over the year,” Bohannon said. “It’s been a great thing to watch. Chris has done a great job with her, and Ian in schooling her to where she’s professional now. She likes it here at Ellis Park. She had another great race here last year (an entry-level allowance win). Getting the black type (stakes placing) today was what we were looking for. Now she can progress to a higher-caliber race next time.”
That likely will be Ellis’ $100,000 Kentucky Downs Preview Ladies at a mile on turf on Aug. 5, itself designed to be a launching pad to the $500,000, Grade 3 Kentucky Downs Ladies at Kentucky Downs, just a short drive from Bohannon’s home in Nashville, Tenn.
Peruvian Chuan wins Ellis riding debut
Martin Chuan, the leading rider in Peru who recently relocated to America, won his Ellis Park debut as Dennis Tuchefeld’s Angelo’s Ashes took the fourth race for trainer Mike Maker. Chuan’s agent is 22-year-old Jake Romans, son of trainer Dale Romans.
Chuan twice before came over to the United States, in 2013 at Turfway Park and 2016 at Churchill Downs, but both times were to ride Peruvian horses and he had no plans to stay. Now he wants to make it in America.
“Miguel Mena told me about this kid,” said Francisco Torres, the retired jockey and current jockey agent for Sammy Camacho who was helping Chuan in an interview.
But asked why he now plans to stay here, Chuan needed no translation of the question, quickly responding in English, “This is my dream.”
Chuan pronounces his name Mar-TEEN Shwawn.

Evansville’s McGuff, Taylor signed by Reds

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The Cincinnati Reds have signed right-handed pitcher Patrick McGuff and outfielder Logan Taylor.

McGuff, a Cincinnati, Ohio native, was drafted in the 36th round of the 2016 MLB Draft by the Minnesota Twins from Morehead State University.

From 2016-17, McGuff split time between the GCL Twins, Elizabethton and Cedar Rapids. In 49 appearances in affiliated baseball, he went 5-2 with a 2.40 ERA and 12 saves. He pitched 82 1/3 innings and struck out 95 batters.

“Patrick certainly deserves this opportunity,” Evansville manager Andy McCauley said. “He was one of the top starters in the Frontier League.”

With Evansville this season, McGuff started five games and went 3-1 with a 1.55 ERA in 29 innings.

“I enjoyed being around Patrick,” McCauley said. “I wish him the best of luck with his hometown Reds.”

Taylor, a Lexington, Ky. native, appeared in six games for the Otters and he went 13 for 23 with a .565 batting average over that span.

He was drafted in the 16th round of the 2017 MLB Draft by the Chicago White Sox out of the University of Louisville.

“Logan made the most of his time in Evansville and he provided a big boost to our offense,” McCauley said. “We will miss his bat in our lineup and we wish him the best.”

Splitting time between the AZL White Sox and Great Falls in 2017, Taylor appeared in 49 games and batted .310 with 21 RBIs during his last stint in affiliated baseball.

The Otters have had 73 players in franchise history sign with a MLB organization out of Evansville. Pitcher Luc Rennie was signed earlier this week by the New York Mets and was assigned to the Columbia Fireflies.

Evansville returns to Bosse Field Tuesday, July 17, at 6:35 p.m. for the first of three against Lake Erie.

“READERS FORUM” JULY 9, 2018

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We hope that today’s “Readers Forum” 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?

HERE’S WHAT ON OUR MIND TODAY:

The revelation that Evansville City Controller Russ Lloyd Jr., CPA hasn’t paid $369,000 in Victory Theater bills for 2017 has really got the attention of many people?  …It will be interesting to learn just how many other actions of financial trickery are being pulled by the City of Evansville to conceal other losses and shift financial burdens?

WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays“Readers Poll” question Is:  Do you feel that Evansville is headed in the right direction?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us CityCountyObserver@live.com.

 

Today’s City Council Meeting Agenda

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City Council Meeting Agenda
JULY 9, 2018
 

AGENDA

I. INTRODUCTION

AGENDA Attachment:

II. APPROVAL OF MEETING MEMORANDA

MEMO Attachment:

III. REPORTS AND COMMUNICATIONS
IV. SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY
V. CONSENT AGENDA:  FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS
A. ORDINANCE G-2018-18 An Ordinance Amending Chapter 10.05 (General Provisions) of the Evansville Municipal Code Sponsor(s): Mercer, Brinkmeyer Discussion Led By: ASD Chair Adams 7/23/2018
G-2018-18 Attachment:
B. ORDINANCE G-2018-19 An Ordinance Amending the City Zoning Code to Establish the Jacobsville Overlay Zone Sponsor(s): Adams Discussion Led By: ASD Chair Adams 7/23/2018
G-2018-19 Attachments
C. ORDINANCE F-2018-12 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Transfers of Appropriations, Additional Appropriations and Repeal and Re-Appropriation of Funds for Various City Funds Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 7/23/2018
F-2018-12 Attachment:
D. ORDINANCE R-2018-21 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 4002 Petes Court Petitioner: Daniel Ehmke Owner: Daniel Ehmke Requested Change: R1 to R3 Ward: 6 Brinkmeyer Representative: Daniel Ehmke
R-2018-21 Attachment:
VI. COMMITTEE REPORTS
VII. REGULAR AGENDA:  SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS
A. ORDINANCE G-2018-14 An Ordinance Amending Chapter 2.98 (Advisory Board on Disability Services) of the Code of Ordinances Sponsor(s): Robinson Discussion Led By: ASD Chair Adams 7/9/2018 Notify: Diane Clements-Boyd, Human Relations
G-2018-14 Attachment:
B. ORDINANCE F-2018-11 AMENDED An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Transfers of Appropriations, Additional Appropriations and Repeal and Re-Appropriation of Funds for Various City Funds Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 7/9/2018 Notify: Russ Lloyd, Jr., City Controller
F-2018-11 Attachment:
F-2018-11 AMENDED Attachment:
C. RESOLUTION C-2018-14 A Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville in Support of Economic Development Incentives Offered to EnCom Polymers, Inc. by the City of Evansville for the Rehabilitation of Real Property and installation of New Equipment in the Facility at 4825 North Spring Street, Evansville, IN. 47711 Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 7/9/2018 Notify: Andrea Lendy, Growth Alliance
C-2018-14 Attachment:
VIII. RESOLUTION DOCKET
A. RESOLUTION C-2018-15 A Confirming Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Declaring an Economic Revitalization Area for Property Tax Phase-In for the Rehabilitation of Real Property and Installation of New Equipment 4825 North Spring Street, Evansville, IN 47711 – EnCom Polymers, Inc. Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 7/9/2018

C-2018-15 Attachment:

B. RESOLUTION C-2018-16 A Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville In Support of Economic Development Incentives Offered to EnCom Polymers, Inc. by the City of Evansville for the Rehabilitation of Real Property and Installation of New Equipment in the Facility at 4825 North Spring Street, Evansville, IN. 47711 Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 7/9/2018
C-2018-16 Attachment:
C. RESOLUTION C-2018-17 Resolution of the Common Council of Evansville, Indiana, Renewing and Extending the Term of the Evansville Urban Enterprise Zone Sponsor(s): Brinkmeyer Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 7/9/2018
C-2018-17 Attachment:
IX. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
A. THE NEXT MEETING of the Common Council will be Monday, July 23, 2018 at 5:30 p.m.
B. EVANSVILLE CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU INTRODUCTION: Joe Taylor, Executive Director
C. DISCUSSION OF CENTER TOWNSHIP’S APPLICATION FOR A PORTION OF THE  PUBLIC SAFETY LIT
D. DISCUSSION OF PAYMENT FOR SECURITY SCREENING DURING CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
E. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS BUSINES
X. COMMITTEE REPORTS
XI. ADJOURNMENT

Protecting Their Passion: Student Journalists Face Censorship

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By Ashley Shuler
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS–Three days before The Quaker Shaker went to the printer, Kyra Howard cried in the hallway.

Howard, 17, is an editor for Plainfield High School’s student publications and designed the first quarterly newsmagazine cover of the school year. Her principal had just told her to change it.

“I was crying because it was my first cover as an editor,” Howard said. “This is my cover. My team did this. We sat down the second week of school to do it. We were so excited.”

Her design headlined the first magazine reviewed not only by the student staff and their adviser Michelle Burress before publication—but also Plainfield administrators.

Editor Kyra Howard looks at the differences between her two cover designs. “You don’t have to make everyone happy. You’re never going to. You can write the best story in the world. You can win every award, and you’re not going to please everyone,” she said. “Do it for you. Do it for the people who are going to be helped by it.” Photo by Ashley Shuler, TheStatehouseFile.com

This prior review started after students published a special issue called “Plainfield High School’s Dating Survival Guide Declassified” in October 2017. The magazine received widespread backlash at school and in the community for its content, which covered many facets of dating. It included a Q&A with a police officer on dating violence, definitions of terms like “friends with benefits” and tips about meeting your significant other’s parents for the first time.

The special edition placed 7th in the Top 10 Best of Show at the National Scholastic Press Association convention.

The photo on Howard’s now-altered cover shows a student’s grossed-out expression while sticking his hands and feet in goo like relish and mustard at a pep session for the homecoming football game.

But Howard said Plainfield High School Principal Melvin Siefert said readers might assume the student’s expression is about the butt in the background, not the goo. He was worried about the community’s reaction of having a button the cover following the dating guide controversy, she said.

“This was taken at a pep session. The whole school was in there. Everyone saw this,” Howard said. “It was about his emotion. It’s a great picture.”

Howard said Siefert originally asked her to change the cover photo completely, but they settled on adding a blue bar to the side to cover the butt, making it less noticeable.

LEFT Senior Kyra Howard’s original cover design, which features a photo of a student’s reaction after sticking his hands and feet in goo like relish and mustard at the school’s homecoming football pep session. RIGHT After Plainfield High School Principal Mel Siefert said readers could assume the student’s expression is about the butt in the background, not the goo, Howard had to alter her design by adding a blue bar to cover it.

“It was either the bar or nothing,” Howard said. “It was kind of heartbreaking.”

Howard’s cover is one example of at least five changes made to content produced by Plainfield journalism students since the prior review began. Other changes include removing part of a quote given by a counselor about insurance and editing a gun off of a student’s shirt.

“I understand they think that this stuff is sensitive and all, but there comes a point when it’s sensitive and when it’s just petty censoring because they’re worried about what the school looks like and not really what’s in the best interest for their students,” Howard said.

A student journalism freedom bill would’ve ended that “petty censoring.”

Silencing New Voices

House Bill 1016 was designed to provide freedom of speech and press protections for student journalists grades 7 through 12 at Indiana public schools.

The legislation would have required school media advisers to work with students to adopt a policy concerning student journalist protections each school year.

It also said schools can’t suppress school-sponsored media unless the school could prove content is libelous or slanderous, creates a clear and present danger of illegal acts, or substantially disrupts the operation of the school, among a list of other conditions. Under the bill, schools would have been off the hook from civil liability for injuries resulting from school-sponsored media produced by a student journalist.

In February, this bill failed in a close 47-45 House vote.

Although the bill got more yes votes than no votes, it failed because it didn’t get the required 51 votes needed for passage to move onto the Senate. Similar legislation failed in the 2017 legislative session when, after passing the House by a wide margin, it never got a vote on the Senate floor.

Rep. Ed Clere, R-New Albany, authored both bills. Claire, once a journalist himself, said the bill’s purpose was to clarify the limits of student journalism by establishing a uniform framework.

The Dating Survival Guide produced by student journalists of Plainfield High School was a source of controversy that ultimately led to a strict review policy. Photo by Ashley Shuler, TheStatehouseFile.com

If re-elected, Claire plans to author similar legislation for a third time next session.

“Students in all schools deserve an opportunity to learn about journalism and to pursue and practice journalism,” Clere said. “Many students never have those opportunities. Some schools recognize the value of student journalism, but many others don’t. Students miss out as a result. It’s not just the would-be student journalists who miss out. It’s the entire school community and society at large.”

Howard was one of many student journalists from around the state who were rooting for the bill’s passage. One of her fellow editors at Plainfield, 16-year-old Anu Nattam, gave a powerful testimony in the House committee.

“I had a veteran Statehouse reporter who grabbed me as we were leaving the committee room that day and told me how inspiring the students were and how it really gave him hope for the future,” Clere said. “It gives me hope for the future.”

HB 1016 is based on successful New Voices USA legislation in other states. New Voices is a network of state-by-state campaigns to pass anti-censorship legislation to protect student journalists from administrative control.

New Voices, when passed, gives students protection beyond the 1988 U.S. Supreme Court Hazelwood decision which ruled schools could control the content of student speech if it caused “legitimate pedagogical concerns.”

In his dissent in Hazelwood, Justice William Brennan outlined his fear the decision would let school officials commit “unconstitutional viewpoint discrimination” by hiding behind these so-called “legitimate pedagogical concerns” to save themselves the hassle and embarrassment.

“It’s been with us for 30 years now, and it’s done incalculable damage to student journalism, and as a result, to professional journalism,” Clere said. “It harms and limits journalism education, and that causes there to be fewer students learning about journalism and thinking about possibly choosing journalism as a career. We need journalists more than ever.”

The Society of Professional Journalists and other journalism education organizations have discredited Hazelwood as having unnecessary control at the post-secondary level and noted the lopsided power dynamic between students and administrators.

While HB 1016 didn’t make it through Indiana’s Statehouse, Washington state passed New Voices legislation in March to protect its students.

“I won’t benefit from it at all,” Howard said. “It’s kind of disappointing that nearly my whole high school journalism career, I will be censored. Even if I fight for it, it’s just not going to happen with the Plainfield administration.”

FOOTNOTE: Ashley Shuler is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.  Despite the national notion of “fake news,” censorship within their own schools and the recent failure of a bill that would’ve protected their First Amendment rights, Indiana high school journalists are determined to make a change and get the story. This is the first of three parts.

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Letter To The Editor: Where Are The Antiwar Protesters?

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Where Are The Anti-War Protesters?

I suppose I understand why there were no protests against Peace Prize-winning President Obama’s various bombings and undeclared wars. To protest back then would be like admitting that our two feuding political tribes are no more than a divide-and-conquer scam; and who’d want to admit that?

But we’ve got a made-for-TV Caligula in that chair now. And the GOP-dominated central government seems just as gung-ho for the seven unconstitutional wars that are now so routine that the media concentrates on professional sports and going-out-of-business sales.

Yet Democrats seem focused solely on side-issues and personal attacks.

Why?

I know that most people can’t name the nations we’re bombing, droning or starving at present. We don’t know which forces in which nations get our money, our wrath, or both simultaneously. And we certainly can’t name which freedom we’re defending…nor do we seem to care about the ones we’re giving up in fear.

We have apparently made war so distant, comfortable and rationalized that it’s not only common but also popular, to proudly encourage entirely-foreign wars that have nothing to do with USA property, liberty or security.

But isn’t it equally apparent that we’ve been intentionally deceived by too many people from all sides for too long?

How did we let ourselves be divided into two arbitrary, abstract, ever-changing and absurd factions battling each other over quibbles, when we really should be uniting against at least our counterproductive, unconstitutional, and insanely costly wars?

We don’t have to agree on everything. But we ought to agree that it’s madness to keep waging wars we can’t even name, for justifications we should no longer swallow.

Maybe we’ll argue tomorrow about how to use all the money we’d save.

But for now, you and I ought to be working against our global military-industrial monster, together.

Liberty or Bust!

Andy Horning

7851 Pleasant Hill Road
Freedom, IN 47431

FOOTNOTE: This letter was posted by the City-County Observer without opinion, bias or editing.