Methodist Hospital, Deaconess Announce Affiliation Agreement
County Celebrating the Bicentennial with Birthday Bash for the Community
County Celebrating Bicentennial With Birthday Bash For The Community
EVANSVILLE, IN – Friday, July 6, from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm, Vanderburgh County Commissioners Bruce Ungethiem, Cheryl Musgrave and Ben Shoulders invite the Community to a “Birthday Bash†at the Old Courthouse lawn to mark the midway point of the County’s 200th year. “We are thrilled with the community support for the County Bicentennial Celebration. This is an exciting time for Vanderburgh County. It’s wonderful to celebrate our history and more importantly, to celebrate where we are going,†said Commissioner Cheryl Musgrave
Friday’s event will kick off at 10:00 am at the 4th Street Stairs of the Old Courthouse with the presentation of a Bicentennial Birthday Cake created and donated by Kempf’s Donut Bank Bakeries. The County Commissioners will recognize the County’s many public servants and the County Bicentennial Celebration sponsors. “We want to take the opportunity to recognize the many businesses and individuals who support the Bicentennial Celebration and also the many public servants who serve our community day in and day out,†Said County Commissioner Bruce Ungethiem.
The event is part of the Old Courthouse Lunch on the Lawn series presented by the Old Courthouse Foundation and is free for the community to attend. Attendees can purchase food from a number of local food trucks including Fresh by Genes, Kona Ice, Pizza by the Slice, Chef Bruce Li, Uncle Ted’s, Lamasco on Location, Papa T’s Tamales, Jayson Munoz Caters, River City Dawgs, and Sassy Sweet Confections. A Mobile Zipline brought to the community by the Old National Events Plaza will be set up on 4th Street and will run between the Old Courthouse and the Old Vanderburgh Jail. It is free for participants to ride. In addition, families can enjoy inflatables and face painting. “This is a family-fun event and we hope to see many faces from the community come out and enjoy the day, “said Commissioner Ben Shoulders.
Bicentennial T-shirts will be available for purchase at the event. All shirt sales proceeds go to support the Bicentennial Park project.
Free parking can be found at the Vanderburgh County Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Coliseum located at 300 Court Street, across from the Old Courthouse.
For more information on the Vanderburgh County Bicentennial, Celebration and upcoming events go to www.VanderburghBicentennial.com.
FOOTNOTE: For more information contact Joelle Knight, Chairwoman of Vanderburgh County Bicentennial Commission at 812-568-9646 or email info@vanderburghbicentennial.com
Commentary: The American Struggle, As It Was, As It Always Will Be
Commentary: The American Struggle, As It Was, As It Always Will Be
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.comÂ
INDIANAPOLIS – About 90 miles south of where I live, two centuries worth of my ancestors lie buried.
My mother’s people settled in the hills between Scottsburg and Salem around the time of the War of 1812, before Indiana was even a state. Of hardy Scots-Irish stock, they worked their way to the hills of what was to be Southern Indiana from the Carolinas up through Tennessee and Kentucky.
They settled in the Hoosier state, dug themselves into this rolling earth and earned a hard living through sweat and determination.
Often, when life or work takes me south, I travel over the well-worn roads to the old cemetery. Stopping there reminds me of the things that endure, the truths that are solid as a rock.
On the Fourth of July, our great national holiday, we Americans often focus on the more hopeful aspects of our country’s saga – the spirit of near-ecstasy F. Scott Fitzgerald captured at the end of “The Great Gatsbyâ€:
“For a transitory enchanted moment, man must have held his breath in the presence of this continent, compelled into an aesthetic contemplation he neither understood nor desired, face to face for the last time in history with something commensurate to his capacity for wonder.â€
Because we like to see our national narrative as a march of triumph, we tend to forget that most American family stories start at a point of despair.
Unless one is Native American, the ancestor whose fate brought most of us here either opted to come to America because life was brutal somewhere else or, in the case of African-Americans, because they were seized and dragged in terror from the homes they knew.
Because we want to see our story as a joyous one with a happy ending, we like to overlook the fact that our tales all too often began in dread. Hardship rather than hope motivated our ancestors to test cruel oceans and try to plant new life in an unknown earth.
My mother’s people are but one example.
Members of a Scottish clan that wagered on the wrong side in one of the British crown’s brutish succession struggles, they found themselves transplanted to Northern Ireland. There, in a poor country, they lived as both irritants and outsiders, sometimes tolerated, never embraced, most often despised and rejected.
Three brothers – one of whom was my direct ancestor and shares my first name – fled to the colonies to begin again because they believed their lot could not get much worse on this then the dark and unsettled continent.
Nor was their time or that of their descendants easy after they landed here.
They had to scramble across a vast landscape to find a place they could call their own. The land upon which they settled was fertile enough to lift them out of poverty, but not by much. Once there, they had to survive the cataclysms of war, civil war, recession, depression, personal travails and various natural disasters.
A struggle followed struggle followed struggle.
That is what draws me back to this family cemetery again and again and again – this dearly-bought knowledge that the true value of this country is not the stuff of swagger, but the humble virtue of endurance.
There is a great strength in the truth my blood speaks – that, again and again, and again, our story began in despair, but, through unstinting labor, we made it something else.
Something better.
A new beginning.
A fresh chance to pursue happiness.
We know difficult days in this country now.
But we have known difficult days before.
We endured then.
We will endure them now.
The challenge before us is the same one that confronted our ancestors, that confronts every generation of Americans – transforming despair and hardship into possibility and hope.
On this Independence Day, as always, we Americans must do what those who came before us did and discover America all over again.
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.  The City-County Observer posted this article without opinion, bias or editing.Â
Tri-State Treasure: The World War One Dough Boy
Tri-State Treasure: The World War One Dough Boy
44News Morning Anchor Tommy Mason shares the story of the Dough Boy, in this installment of Tri-State Treasures.
Conour Agrees To Dismiss Third Appeal Of Wire Fraud Conviction
Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawer.com
Convicted fraudster and former Indianapolis attorney William Conour has agreed to dismiss the third appeal of his 10-year federal prison sentence stemming from a 2012 wire fraud conviction for stealing more than $6 million from his personal-injury and wrongful death clients.
The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals granted Conour’s motion to dismiss the appeal on June 18, the same day the motion was filed. A “Consent to Dismiss Appeal†filed with the court and signed by Conour says he concurred with his counsel’s decision to move to dismiss the appeal and agreed to waive his rights “to object or raise any points on direct appeal.†According to court documents, the former attorney – who has proceeded pro se at multiple times throughout his appeals and resentencing – was represented by Michelle L. Jacobs and Vanessa K. Eisenmann of the Wisconsin law firm Biskupic & Jacobs, S.C. at the time of the dismissal.
After Indiana Southern District Court Judge Richard Young imposed the 10-year wire fraud sentence in 2013, Conour began a series of sentencing appeal to the 7th Circuit. The 10-year sentence and more than $6 million in restitution were reimposed each time on remand, which was most recently ordered in December after the 7th Circuit determined Conour was not given the opportunity to allocate at his first re-sentencing.
During his second resentencing hearing in March, Conour maintained that he was only liable to one victim, not the roughly three dozen clients who were identified during his trial. He also claimed his one victim was not entitled to money because the settlement negotiations — which yielded $450,000 that Conour stole — were not through.
Conour’s comments prompted Young to threaten to revoke the disgraced attorney’s guilty plea and send the case to a jury trial. In the end, however, the judge reimposed an identical sentence.
Conour initially filed his third notice of appeal in April, and his appellant’s brief had been due on June 21.
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.
Zachary Alan Miller: Battery by means of a deadly weapon (Level 5 Felony), Battery by means of a deadly weapon (Level 5 Felony), Criminal trespass (Class A misdemeanor)
Andrea Alex Brown: Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)
Robert Kenneth Evans: Failure to register as a sex or violent offender (Level 5 Felony)
Felice Ann Haire: Conspiracy Dealing in a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony), Dealing in a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony), Maintaining a common nuisance – controlled substances (Level 6 Felony)
Denise Faye Jackson: Conspiracy Dealing in a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony), Dealing in a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony), Maintaining a common nuisance – controlled substances (Level 6 Felony)
Michael Deshay Jackson: Resisting law enforcement (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor)
Gregory Lee Snyder: Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life (Level 5 Felony)
Jamie Lynn Gooch: Unlawful possession or use of a legend drug (Level 6 Felony), Theft (Class A misdemeanor)
Michael Deshay Jackson: Dealing in cocaine (Level 4 Felony), Possession of cocaine (Level 5 Felony), Possession of cocaine (Level 6 Felony)
Payton Elizabeth Hodges-Scarbrough: Possession of a narcotic drug (Level 6 Felony)
Aaron Keith Carnahan: Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony)
Tosheana R. Jones: Resisting law enforcement (Level 6 Felony), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor)
Jennifer Ann Tucker: Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony)
Richard Allen Stewart: Unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon (Level 4 Felony), Possession of methamphetamine (Level 5 Felony), Maintaining a common nuisance – controlled substances (Level 6 Felony)
Michael Ray Coburn: Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life (Level 5 Felony)
Keith David Blaser: Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor)
Natalie Marie Salen:Â Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor)
Indiana Conservation Officers Apprehend Parole Suspect Near Rockford Dam (Jackson Co.)
Indiana Conservation Officers, along with multiple other local law enforcement agencies, apprehended a suspect after he jumped into the White River at Rockford Dam in Seymour early yesterday afternoon.
While performing routine license checks in the area of the Dam, ICO Blake Everhart made contact with the suspect, Gregory A. Smith, 29, of Seymour. After ICO Everhart identified that Smith had outstanding warrant for a parole violation and attempted to place Smith into custody, Smith jumped into the White River to evade arrest.
ICO Cpl. Nathan Berry responded with an airboat to assist in the search for Smith along with responders from other agencies. After nearly three hours, Smith was located and again fought with officers while on the riverbank as the officers attempted to detain him. Smith jumped into the River again after a second foot pursuit with conservation officers and was eventually taken into custody by ICO Everhart and Cpl. Berry.
Smith was transported and booked into the Jackson County Jail on current charges of Resisting Law Enforcement and will be awaiting extradition on the outstanding parole warrant.
Agencies assisting at the scene were the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department, Indiana State Police, and Seymour Police Department.