FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
On September 10th around 2:30 pm officers were dispatched to the 3900 block of Covert
Avenue for shots fired. On scene officers located a victim, along with several witnesses, who
reported that a male fired three shots toward the victim from an apartment balcony. No one was struck by the bullets.
Officers quickly established a perimeter and surrounded the apartment. Officers were eventually able to get the suspect, Selmo Cadet, to exit the apartment where he was taken into custody.
46-year-old Selmo Cadet was arrested and charged with possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon, attempted battery with a deadly weapon, and criminal recklessness with a deadly weapon.
Shorthanded Trailblazers pick up big Region 24 road sweep
BELLEVILLE, Ill. – The Vincennes University volleyball team has been battle tested early in this season with multiple starters out of the lineup Tuesday night as VU headed to Belleville to take on Southwestern Illinois College.
Vincennes was able to keep their composure in a hostile environment and come away with their 42nd straight Region 24 victory, winning over the Blue Storm 25-20, 25-17, 25-16.
The Blazers were able to break away first in the first set with a 6-0 scoring run to take a 10-5 lead.
Southwestern Illinois slowly chipped away at this VU lead, cutting the deficit down to a single point at 21-20 before the Blazers slammed the door on the first set by scoring the final four points to take set one 25-20.
VU continued to ride this momentum into the second set, quickly building a 9-3 lead and later seemed to be in full control with a 21-11 advantage.
Southwestern Illinois again continued to fight and began to swing the momentum with four straight points, but were unable to erase the Vincennes lead as the Trailblazers took set two 25-17 to take a 2-0 match lead.
Set three began as another back-and-forth battle with VU holding onto a narrow 12-11 lead before freshman Brooklyn Summers (Loogootee, Ind.) subbed in and helped guide the Blazers on a 5-0 scoring run from the service line.
Vincennes continued to add on with a later 6-1 scoring run to close out set three 25-16 and complete sweep over the Blue Storm.
“We were missing a number of players tonight but that’s fine,” VUVB Head Coach Gary Sien said. “We have full confidence in the ones we put on the floor tonight. Tough situation on the road but we challenged everyone to play big to fill up the holes that we have missing.”
“I’m very proud of how each person rallied around each other despite the circumstances,” Sien added. “Their toughness and grit were displayed tonight for all to see.”
The VU offense was again led by a big game by sophomore Laura Tavares (Merida, Venezuela), who finished with 18 kills, four blocks, one dig and one set assist.
Sophomore Isadora Dias (Rio Grande de Norte, Brazil) continues to put up big numbers, finishing with eight kills, a team-high 21 digs, and three blocks.
Freshmen Martyna Sadowska (Pila, Poland) and Paulina Fister (Tuszyn, Poland) stepped up in a big way Tuesday, with Sadowska getting five kills, five blocks, three digs, and a pair of aces, while Fister ended her night with four kills and three digs.
Sophomore Allison Czyzewski (Louisville, Ky.) rounded out the VU offense with a pair of kills and one block.
Freshman Rylee Edwards (Fairfield, Ill.) stepped in at the setter position and ran a very good VU offense with 29 set assists and five digs.
Sophomore libero Grace Flexter (Oblong, Ill.) controlled the back-row defense on her way to 16 digs and one ace.
Sophomore Dylan DeCoursey (Montgomery, Ind.) and freshman Brooklyn Summers rounded out the VU box score with DeCoursey recording four digs and one block, while Summers ended with three digs.
“We are, of course, concerned with those missing but we have to be focused on those who are here,” Sien said. “Rylee set an excellent match, making some great choices out there. She was also instrumental in us making big runs with her serves and in her defense.”
“Martyna, who we recruited as a middle blocker, showed why we did that with her performance in hitting, blocking, and in her serving,” Sien added. “Paulina took some great swings out there as she is working her way back into the lineup.”
“Laura was next level in her swings,” Sien said. “That was probably a career night. We challenged our team members to lead and she led by her example. Isadora swung well and was outstanding in the back row as she covered from corner to corner.”
SEPTEMBER 11, 202
Americans watched in horror as the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, left nearly 3,000 people dead in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Nearly 20 years later, they watched in sorrow as the nation’s military mission in Afghanistan – which began less than a month after 9/11 – came to a bloody and chaotic conclusion.
The enduring power of the Sept. 11 attacks is clear: An overwhelming share of Americans who are old enough to recall the day remember where they were and what they were doing when they heard the news. Yet an ever-growing number of Americans have no personal memory of that day, either because they were too young or not yet born.
A review of U.S. public opinion in the two decades since 9/11 reveals how a badly shaken nation came together, briefly, in a spirit of sadness and patriotism; how the public initially rallied behind the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, though support waned over time; and how Americans viewed the threat of terrorism at home and the steps the government took to combat it.
As the country comes to grips with the tumultuous exit of U.S. military forces from Afghanistan, the departure has raised long-term questions about U.S. foreign policy and America’s place in the world. Yet the public’s initial judgments on that mission are clear: A majority endorses the decision to withdraw from Afghanistan, even as it criticizes the Biden administration’s handling of the situation. And after a war that cost thousands of lives – including more than 2,000 American service members – and trillions of dollars in military spending, a new Pew Research Center survey finds that 69% of U.S. adults say the United States has mostly failed to achieve its goals in Afghanistan.
Shock, sadness, fear, anger: The 9/11 attacks inflicted a devastating emotional toll on Americans. But as horrible as the events of that day were, a 63% majority of Americans said they couldn’t stop watching news coverage of the attacks.
Our first survey following the attacks went into the field just days after 9/11, from Sept. 13-17, 2001. A sizable majority of adults (71%) said they felt depressed, nearly half (49%) had difficulty concentrating and a third said they had trouble sleeping.
It was an era in which television was still the public’s dominant news source – 90% said they got most of their news about the attacks from television, compared with just 5% who got news online – and the televised images of death and destruction had a powerful impact. Around nine-in-ten Americans (92%) agreed with the statement, “I feel sad when watching TV coverage of the terrorist attacks.” A sizable majority (77%) also found it frightening to watch – but most did so anyway.
Americans were enraged by the attacks, too. Three weeks after 9/11, even as the psychological stress began to ease somewhat, 87% said they felt angry about the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon.
Fear was widespread, not just in the days immediately after the attacks, but throughout the fall of 2001. Most Americans said they were very (28%) or somewhat (45%) worried about another attack. When asked a year later to describe how their lives changed in a major way, about half of adults said they felt more afraid, more careful, more distrustful or more vulnerable as a result of the attacks.
Even after the immediate shock of 9/11 had subsided, concerns over terrorism remained at higher levels in major cities – especially New York and Washington – than in small towns and rural areas. The personal impact of the attacks also was felt more keenly in the cities directly targeted: Nearly a year after 9/11, about six-in-ten adults in the New York (61%) and Washington (63%) areas said the attacks had changed their lives at least a little, compared with 49% nationwide. This sentiment was shared by residents of other large cities. A quarter of people who lived in large cities nationwide said their lives had changed in a major way – twice the rate found in small towns and rural areas.
The impacts of the Sept. 11 attacks were deeply felt and slow to dissipate. By the following August, half of U.S. adults said the country “had changed in a major way” – a number that actually increased, to 61%, 10 years after the event.
A year after the attacks, in an open-ended question, most Americans – 80% – cited 9/11 as the most important event that had occurred in the country during the previous year. Strikingly, a larger share also volunteered it as the most important thing that happened to them personally in the prior year (38%) than mentioned other typical life events, such as births or deaths. Again, the personal impact was much greater in New York and Washington, where 51% and 44%, respectively, pointed to the attacks as the most significant personal event over the prior year.
Just as memories of 9/11 are firmly embedded in the minds of most Americans old enough to recall the attacks, their historical importance far surpasses other events in people’s lifetimes. In a survey conducted by Pew Research Center in association with A+E Networks’ HISTORY in 2016 – 15 years after 9/11 – 76% of adults named the Sept. 11 attacks as one of the 10 historical events of their lifetime that had the greatest impact on the country. The election of Barack Obama as the first Black president was a distant second, at 40%.
The importance of 9/11 transcended age, gender, geographic and even political differences. The 2016 study noted that while partisans agreed on little else that election cycle, more than seven-in-ten Republicans and Democrats named the attacks as one of their top 10 historic events.
STATEHOUSE – A local burglary involving a high-tech signal jammer most often used to evade authorities has State Rep. Wendy McNamara (R-Evansville) and the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office working together to find legislative solutions.
During a meeting led by McNamara today at the Statehouse, the Interim Study Committee on Corrections and Criminal Code discussed concerns over criminals using signal jamming equipment, which can turn off Wi-Fi cameras, like Ring doorbells, and other devices that use radio frequencies, to avoid getting caught. Recently, Vanderburgh County sheriff deputies found a frequency jamming device in a burglary suspect’s vehicle, which they believe prevented their computer from working.
While it’s a federal crime to use this technology, McNamara said Indiana does not have a law on the books about intentionally interfering with communications.
“I’m very concerned about criminals’ use of this technology and the threat it presents to public safety,” McNamara said. “These jamming devices could mean a victim couldn’t call 911 for help or access their security cameras. We want to close any loopholes in state law to ensure criminals will be held accountable. That’s why I will continue working with the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office and other local law enforcement to find legislative solutions to propose during the upcoming legislative session.”
Vanderburgh County Sheriff Noah Robinson testified today during the study committee about the dangers of signal jamming devices and called for legislative action to help law enforcement hold criminals accountable.
“Indiana has a number of laws that deal with the interference with reporting of a crime, but none that deal with actually interfering with the signals that are being broadcast by our cellular and Wi-Fi devices,” Robinson said. “As a local law enforcement officer, it is frustrating to see someone use a device of this magnitude and the danger it poses and not have any teeth in Indiana law to allow us to take action to stop it or dissuade someone else from trying the same thing.”
McNamara said Robinson’s testimony helped her and the members of the interim study committee better understand the technology and law enforcement’s concerns, and she plans to craft legislation during the 2025 session, which will begin in January.
Fighting federal overreach and job-killing climate extremism, Attorney General Todd Rokita leads multistate suit against Biden-Harris ‘Clean Power Plan 2.0’
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency edict is designed to expand control over lives and kill jobs
Taking the next step in a lawsuit of massive ramifications, Attorney General Todd Rokita and fellow plaintiffs have filed an opening brief in federal appeals court asserting that an invasive new EPA rule is unlawful.
Further, if implemented, the Biden-Harris administration rule would 1) threaten the reliability of America’s power grid, 2) jack up utility costs for U.S. consumers, 3) destroy jobs and 4) wreck the nation’s economy.
“This extremist rule would prove absolutely devastating to everyday, hardworking Hoosiers,” Attorney General Rokita said. “It would expand the federal government’s control of people’s lives without even helping conserve the natural environment in any meaningful way. Plus it would kill jobs.”
Attorney General Rokita announced in May that he and West Virginia’s attorney general were co-leading a 25-state lawsuit opposing the Biden-Harris administration’s “Clean Power Plan 2.0.” Other states and industry are challenging the rule as well.
The EPA rule takes deadly aim at coal-fired power plants — requiring many to capture 90% of carbon emissions using expensive, unproven technology. And in the meantime, as federal bureaucrats promise a future filled with unspecified “green” jobs, the EPA’s rule forces the premature closure of these plants. This takes a two-part hit on Hoosiers: the killing of jobs and the expansion of the federal government’s control over everyday people’s lives.
Countless hard workers are put in imminent and long-term peril, including the jobs of people in coal-fired power plants and adjacent employees who work for companies which provide supplies, transportation, logistics and other day-to-day services. By causing higher energy costs across all industries, the rule also forces budget-cutting and a potentially seismic reduction in the overall work force. This rule exceeds the agency’s statutory authority and gives insufficient consideration to important facts, such as cost and grid reliability.
“There is no justification — none — for surrendering state and local authority to power-hungry unelected bureaucrats in the federal government,” Attorney General Rokita said. “And we certainly face no dire crisis requiring us to torpedo our state and national economy.”
While the Biden administration seeks to appease the powerful political forces behind a radical clima