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Indiana Senate lLeader Long Joins Ice Miller

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In advance of his retirement from the Indiana Statehouse in November, Senate President Pro Tem David Long, R-Fort Wayne, will be joining Ice Miller LLP as a partner today.

Long, who has a law office in Fort Wayne and serves as general counsel for Pizza Hut, will practice in the firm’s Public Affairs Group. On Ice Miller’s website, this practice group boasts its pool of professionals who have extensive knowledge of the government and offers its services for solving issues either related to lobbying matters or involving multiple branches of government.

“David Long is a highly respected figure who has left a legacy of growth and sound fiscal management for the state of Indiana,” said Ice Miller chief managing partner Steve Humke. “With David joining our team, we strengthen our ability to provide relevant and actional advice to our clients on defining issues.”

Although his term does not end until 2020, Long announced in February that he would retire Nov. 6 after 22 years in the Indiana Senate. He told The Journal Gazette he does not intend to lobby the Indiana General Assembly after his retirement but instead will spend his time helping Ice Miller expand its national footprint. The firm has six offices outside of Indianapolis including ones in Chicago, New York, Philadelphia and Columbus, Ohio.

“David enhances Ice Miller’s growing regional and national depth and adds to the firm’s increasing presence beyond its strongholds in Indiana, Ohio, Illinois and Washington, D.C.,” said John Hammond, partner and chair of the Public Affairs Group. “He is widely respected on both sides of the aisle for his integrity, professionalism and ability to get big things done through building consensus.”

Long’s early exit from the Statehouse to join a law firm follows Brandt Hershman, former Senate majority floor leader. The Buck Creek Republican resigned from the Indiana Senateone day before the 2018 session began to become a partner Barnes & Thornburg and work in the firm’s Washington, D.C. office.

During his 12 years as leader of the Indiana Senate, Long is credited with keeping the state’s budgets balanced. He is also view as having been instrumental in supporting Major Moves, a $3.8 billion initiative to improve Indiana’s roadways, and the Healthy Indiana Plan, a health care plan for the underprivileged. Martinsville Republican Rodric Bray has been appointed to replace Long as the Senate’s leader. 

Long earned his law degree from Santa Clara University school of Law in 1983 and his Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of California, Davis, in 1978.

“I am honored to be joining Ice Miller and look forward to becoming part of their well-respected team,” Long said. “Ice Miller has a deep, bipartisan talent pool and cutting edge resources that will provide a robust platform to serve clients at the highest level.”

AG Curtis Hill announces $100 million multistate settlement after Citibank manipulated interest rate benchmarks

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Attorney General Curtis Hill today announced a $100 million multistate settlement with Citibank for fraudulent conduct involving USD LIBOR — a benchmark interest rate that affects financial instruments worth trillions of dollars and has a widespread impact on global markets and consumers. (The acronyms stand for “U.S. Dollar” and “London Inter-bank Offered Rate.”)

Forty-two state attorneys general involved in investigating this matter allege that Citibank misrepresented the integrity of the LIBOR benchmark to state and local governmental, not-for-profit, private, and institutional trading counterparties by concealing, misrepresenting and failing to disclose these facts:

  • Citibank, at times, madeUSD LIBOR submissions to avoid negative publicity and protect the reputation of the bank.
  • Citibank’s USD LIBOR submitters, on occasion, asked Citibank personnel in other units of the bank to avoid offering higher rates than Citibank’s USD LIBOR submissions.
  • Citibank expressed belief that other banks, at times, made USD LIBOR submissions that were inconsistent with their borrowing rates and contributed to inaccurate LIBORs.

Given this conduct, Citibank had reason to believe that Citibank’s and other banks’ LIBOR submissions did not reflect their true borrowing rates in accordance with the established public guidance. Citibank did not disclose this to the governmental and not-for profit counterparties with whom Citibank executed LIBOR-referenced transactions — even though these rates were material terms of the transactions.

As a result of its fraudulent conduct, Citibank made millions in unjust gains when government entities and not-for-profit organizations entered into swaps and other financial contracts with Citibank without knowing that Citibank and other banks on the USD-LIBOR-setting panel were manipulating LIBOR submissions.

“The technical aspects of high-level banking and financial practices are complex to the average citizen,” Attorney General Hill said. “Those of us in public service must work to protect consumers and to ensure that financial institutions are held accountable for following the law. This settlement helps mitigate the damage done by Citibank’s past misrepresentations.”

Governmental and not-for-profit entities with LIBOR-linked swaps and other investment contracts with Citibank will be notified if they are eligible to receive a distribution from a settlement fund of $95 million. The balance of the settlement fund will be used to pay costs and expenses of the investigation and for other uses consistent with state laws.

Citibank is the third of several USD-LIBOR-setting panel banks under investigation by the state attorneys general to resolve the claims against it. With the Citibank settlement, the states have collected $420 million in payments from the three banks, almost all of which will be distributed to state and local government entities and not-for-profits that have been harmed by these banks’ wrongful conduct.

Pursuant to the settlement agreement, Citibank will continue to cooperate with the states’ ongoing investigation into the conduct of other USD LIBOR-setting panel banks.

Gov. Holcomb, DCS leaders and national experts to present agency assessment

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Representatives from the Child Welfare Policy and Practice Group (CWG) will present key findings and recommendations from the Indiana Department of Child Services (DCS) assessment requested by Governor Eric J. Holcomb in December 2017. Gov. Holcomb and DCS Director Terry Stigdon will provide remarks.

The event will be in the Indiana Government Conference Center Auditorium at 1:30 p.m. ET, Monday, June 18. This event is by invitation only; however, media are welcome to attend. The presentation and remarks will be livestreamed online at the link below for all Hoosiers to view.

WHAT:                    Presentation of key findings and recommendations by CWG

Remarks by Gov. Holcomb and DCS Director Terry Stigdon

WHO:                     Gov. Holcomb

DCS Director Terry Stigdon

CWG representatives

WHEN:                   1:30 p.m. ET

Monday, June 18, 2018

WHERE:                 Indiana Government Conference Center, Auditorium

302 W. Washington St.

Indianapolis, IN  46204

   Click here for a conference center map   

 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Alana Marie Mangus: Unlawful possession or use of a legend drug (Level 6 Felony), Unlawful possession or use of a legend drug (Level 6 Felony), Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony), Possession of a controlled substance (Class A misdemeanor), Possession of paraphernalia (Class C misdemeanor)

Randy Michael Wolfe: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony), Conversion (Class A misdemeanor), Criminal mischief (Class B misdemeanor)

David Aaron Duncan: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony)

Lauren Alexis Baucom: Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)

Coty Lee Carter Edelen: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony)

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Net2Source 9 reviews – Evansville, IN
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Valid Driver’s License. Prior basic Electrical, Gas or Plumbing experience, including working with hand tools are required….
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Tropicana Entertainment Inc. 56 reviews – Evansville, IN
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JOIN OUR TEAM! Complete an On-Line Application NOW! Simply click on the EMPLOYMENT Button located on the TropEvansville.com Home Page. Candidates must have an…
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NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. Technical minded • Exceptional customer service skills • High level computer skills with the ability to type 45 wpm or more and familiar…
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Develop, Maintain, and review KANBAN System. Maintain plant WIP and Purchased part storage layout. Will be required to communicate with all levels of plant…
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G4S 8,454 reviews – Evansville, IN
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Must successfully complete a State licensing test if driving a company-owned or client-provided vehicle. Graduate of a Certified Public Safety Academy (military…
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Maintains customer information assuring the highest standards of data entry including establishing new accounts, issuing comp/cash vouchers to guests based on…
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Have a valid driver’s license and insured vehicle. Assist new staff with passing medications by answering questions and talking them through the process to…
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Applicants must pass the required criminal background checks, fingerprinting, CPS checks, pass a drug screen, hold a valid driver’s license and qualify for the…
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Scheduling patient appointments, greet patients at check in/check out, filing, answering multi line phones, entering patient demographics, and miscellaneous…
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Ensure timely, accurate, and pleasant communications with all constituents, including internal e-mails/memos to staff/faculty and students, answering the…
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Makes proactive calls to dealers to ensure customer satisfaction. Processes all customer credit requests (return authorizations and deductions)….
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Custom Protection Officer PT
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ADOPT A PET

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Mr. Ray is an adorable 3-month-old kitten from the Finding Dory litter! He and his brother Chum are currently up for adoption. They are both male orange tabbies. Mr. Ray is neutered and ready to go home today with his microchip and first shots & deworming for only $60. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for details!

 

Elkhart inmate files wrongful conviction petition claiming Elkhart Police coerced his statement

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.

Nearly 13 years after he was found guilty of a murder he claims he did not commit and following a subsequent series of failed attempts at appellate and post-conviction relief, a developmentally disabled man has petitioned the Elkhart Circuit Court to overturn his conviction on the basis of new evidence he says proves his confession was coerced and his counsel was ineffective.

Andrew Royer, who is currently serving a 55-year sentence in the Pendleton Correctional Facility, filed a petition to vacate the judgment against him in Judge Teresa Cataldo’s court on Wednesday. The petition was filed by Elliot Slosar, an attorney for the Exoneration Project at the University of Chicago Law School. Slosar worked in conjunction with the Notre Dame Exoneration Project at Notre Dame Law School and the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law on Royer’s wrongful conviction case, which traces back to the November 2002 murder of Helen Sailor.

Sailor was found dead in her unit at the Waterfall Highrise Apartments in Elkhart on Nov. 29, 2002, the day after Thanksgiving. Her body was discovered after Sailor did not return several phone calls during the Thanksgiving evening and the following morning, prompting family members to unlock her apartment. Witnesses found several of Sailor’s personal items out of place, including her Bible, where she was believed to have kept money. No money was found in the Bible when Sailor’s body was discovered.

An autopsy revealed the 94-year-old died of strangulation. Injuries to her eyes, hands and wrists were discovered on the body, as well as a “greasy pink fluid” on her clothing.

The Elkhart Police Department’s homicide unit took over the investigation into Sailor’s death in August 2003, when Detectives Carl Conway and Mark Daggy began following up on unresolved leads. One of those leads allegedly came from Jerome Johnson, a Highrise resident who claimed Royer and co-defendant, Lana Canen, stopped by his apartment around midnight on the night of the murder.

Then in September 2003, Nina Porter, who knew both Canen and Royer, was pulled over and arrested for driving without a license. Porter told police, then later testified at the joint trial against both defendants, that Canen had told her in July 2003 “no one was supposed to get hurt.” Porter also testified that Canen told her she “went upstairs to an old lady, and she said she could come and get money. When she got there, she couldn’t give her the money because someone told her not to.” Finally, Porter, who was the state’s key witness, said she heard Canen mumble, “Thanksgiving, thanks for giving death.”

Canen was also tied to Sailor’s murder via a latent fingerprint found in Sailor’s apartment. A self-proclaimed latent fingerprint expert testified that the print matched Canen’s latent fingerprint, placing her in the apartment. Though no physical evidence was found against Royer, Porter testified that he would do whatever Canen told him to, while police obtained a taped confession from the man.

Together, that evidence led to both Royer and Canen’s convictions in 2005. Royer has filed multiple appellate and PCR motions, but to no avail. However, Canen was exonerated in 2012 after Detective Dennis Chapman, the “expert” who originally linked Canen’s latent fingerprint to the one found at the scene, changed his opinion and instead told the court that the print found at the scene actually excluded Canen.

Chapman also admitted that he had never been certified as a latent print examiner, while Vicki Becker, the attorney who prosecuted the Royer-Canen case and who is now the Elkhart County Prosecutor, claimed Chapman intentionally lied to her when he said “he had personally performed over 100 evaluations of latent print comparisons.” That lie and other alleged omissions and failures by Elkhart law enforcement and Royer’s counsel form the basis of the petition to vacate judgment in State of Indiana v. Andrew Royer, 20D03-0309-MR-155.

The 105-page petition illuminates several pieces of new evidence that Slosar said prove Royer is an innocent man who was wrongly convicted. Aside from Chapman’s lie about his credentials and his faulty fingerprint analysis, the petition also takes aim at Porter and Johnson’s statements, which the two witnesses have now recanted.

Both Porter and Johnson now claim their statements were false and were the result of police coercion. Porter, who was on probation when she was pulled over, said detectives screamed “Do you want to lose your kids? Do you want to go back to prison?” to scare her, then turned off the tape recorder and instructed her to read phrases written on the back of photographs. Once the recorder was turned back on, Porter repeated the phrases presented to her, including “Thanksgiving, thanks for giving death.” Daggy also paid Porter $2,000 for her testimony, a fact that was not disclosed to the defense, according to the petition.

Johnson has also admitting to lying in his testimony, stating instead that no one but his sister visited his apartment on Thanksgiving Day in 2002. He said “the police hounded (him) for six months,” leading to his perjury.

Similarly, the central claim of both Royer’s defense and his petition to vacate judgment rests on the allegation that his statement was also coerced and, thus, false. Royer was receiving mental health treatment for his diagnoses of Schizoaffective disorder, depression and a personality disorder prior to becoming a suspect, yet was not given his medication prior to Conway’s interrogation. Two members of the Elkhart Police Department, including Daggy, later testified that Conway’s interrogation of Royer was “the worst they have ever seen,” pointing to Conway’s leading questions that led to inconsistent statements.

Lt. Peggy Snider shared Daggy’s concerns and said she never believed Royer was the killer. Instead, she implicated Larry Wood, a medication deliveryman who regularly delivered Sailor’s prescriptions. Wood was the last person known to see Sailor alive, and blood and an oily substance similar to what was found on Sailor’s body were found on his shoes. The petition also points to evidence of Wood admitting during a truth verification exam that he had strangled Sailor.

None of the evidence against Wood was introduced at trial, and law enforcement testified that no clear suspects emerged early in the investigation. The petition disputes that assertion, pointing to the investigation into Wood and another suspect, Tony Thomas, who seen at the apartment complex acting belligerently and suspiciously on the day of the murder.

While the petition takes aim at Elkhart Police for allegedly withholding this evidence, it also alleges that Royer’s counsel, Elkhart attorney Chris Crawford, was ineffective for failing to impeach witnesses, failing to confront law enforcement’s alleged perjury regarding the existence of other suspects, and failing to follow through on Royer’s request to sever his trial from Canen’s, among other allegations of ineffective assistance.

“This evidence illustrates Mr. Royer’s innocence and reveals that the prosecution, through the Elkhart Police Department, withheld material exculpatory evidence,” Slosar wrote in the petition, which requests an oral hearing. “Further, Mr. Royer’s trial counsel was wholly ineffective. Under Indiana Trial Rule 60(B)(8), this Court should vacate the judgment on Mr. Royer’s Petition for Post-Conviction Relief and grant Mr. Royer a new trial.”

Neither representatives from the Elkhart Police or Prosecutor’s Office nor Crawford immediately responded to requests for comment on the allegations against them. As on Friday afternoon, no action had been taken on Royer’s petition in the trial court.  Court records show Royer is currently scheduled to be released on March 3, 2030.

Otters topple Beach Bums in series opener

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Behind a strong pitching performance from Randy Wynne, the Evansville Otters topped the Traverse City Beach Bums 7-2 on Friday evening in front of 2,022 fans at Bosse Field.
Joe Lytle opened the scoring for the Otters in the second inning with an RBI single for his first professional hit and run driven in as he put the Otters up 1-0.

Travis Harrison doubled the lead with an RBI single in the third.

Traverse City got on the board on an RBI groundout from Will Kengor in the top of the fourth.

Evansville broke the game open with four runs in the fourth. Manny Cruz ripped an RBI single, which was then followed by back-to back RBI triples from Ryan Long and David Cronin. Jeff Gardner capped off the inning with an RBI single to push the Otters lead to 6-1.

Traverse City got one back on a solo home run from Luke Lowery to cut it to a 6-2 ball game.

The Otters added on a seventh run in the eighth when Harrison walked with the bases loaded to force home a run.

Randy Wynne threw eight strong innings, allowing just two runs, on six hits while striking out five and walking only one en route to his third win of the season. Wynne’s eight innings ties for the most innings thrown by an Otters pitcher this season in a single game.

Matt Murphy is dealt the loss for the Beach Bums in his first professional start. Murphy went just three innings, allowing two runs on five hits while striking out five.

The series will continue tomorrow when the two clubs square off at 6:35 p.m. at Bosse Field with fireworks set to follow the game. Saturday’s game is presented by the Boys and Girls Club and Slay’s Restoration.

Traffic Stop Leads to Felony Warrant Arrest and Resisting Charge

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Posey County – At approximately 2:15 pm this afternoon, Senior Trooper Kylen Compton assisted Posey County Deputies with an arrest warrant at 1055 Old Beech Rd. Upon arrival, S/Trp. Compton spotted a Gold Chevrolet Blazer leaving the residence with an expired license plate.  S/Trp. Compton stopped the Blazer on SR 69 near Old Beech Road.

The driver of the vehicle was identified as Robert McCarty.  McCarty was the individual S/Trp. Compton and Posey County Deputies were attempting to serve the arrest warrant on at 1055 Old Beech Rd.  McCarty was wanted on an outstanding warrant through Posey County for Criminal Confinement, Battery Resulting in Moderate Bodily Injury, Strangulation, and Interference with the reporting of a crime. McCarty was taken into custody by S/Trp. Compton and allegedly became uncooperative and combative with S/Trp. Compton after being placed into custody. At one point McCarty attempted to spit on S/Trp. Compton.

McCarty was arrested and transported to the Posey County Jail where he is currently being held on bond.

Arrested and Charges:

  • Robert Eugene McCarty, 32, 1055 Old Beech Road, Mt. Vernon,

1. Warrant through Posey County

2. Resisting Law Enforcement