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Willard Library Book Sale
Settlement allows children to visit Allen County Jail inmates
Dave Stafford for www.theiindianalawyer.com
A settlement in a federal lawsuit ends a policy that prohibited Allen County Jail inmates from receiving visits from their children, among other agreed changes.
Settlement terms of the class action Ronald Ward and Samuel Chinnis v. David Gladieux, in his official capacity as Allen County Sheriff, 1:16-cv-99, end a complaint brought on behalf of inmates in 2016.
The suit alleged parents detained pretrial were forbidden under Allen County Jail policy from non-contact visitation with their children or with minor relatives, a policy that plaintiffs said served no reasonable or rational relation to security or penological interests of the jail. The suit claimed the practice violated detainees’ constitutional rights under the First and 14th Amendments and under Section 12, Article 1 and Section 9, Article 1 of the Indiana Constitution.
The settlement filed as a joint stipulation Wednesday in the U.S. Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne, lifts that policy barring minor visitation and revises those concerning mail and photos pretrial detainees may receive.
General terms of the settlement provide:
• Inmates will have the same privileges to visitation from their minor children or minor relatives as they have to visits from any non-restricted visitor.
• Inmates will be allowed to receive photos by mail and possess up to 10 photos that meet size and content restrictions specified in the settlement. Examples of restricted photos include those larger than 3-by-5 inches and those containing violent or gang images or those that are sexually suggestive. Inmates may not display photos in their cells. Photos must be kept in property bags. Any excess or nonconforming photos will be placed with the inmate’s property.
• Inmates may send and receive mail on yellow or white legal paper only. Any nonconforming stationery will be placed into the inmate’s property. Inmates may keep up to 15 letters; any in excess will be placed with inmate’s property.
The settlement in the case filed by Fort Wayne civil rights lawyer David Frank calls for each party to pay its own legal fees.
Gov. Holcomb Public Schedule for May 14
Below find Indiana Gov. Eric J. Holcomb’s public schedule for May 14, 2018.
Monday, May 14, 2018: Indiana School Safety Specialist Academy
WHO:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Gov. Holcomb
WHAT:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â The governor will give opening remarks.
WHEN:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 8:30 a.m., Monday, May 14
WHERE:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Marriott Indianapolis
Ballroom 5-10 (2nd Floor)
350 W. Maryland St.
Indianapolis, IN 46225
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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EVANSVILLE POLICE MERIT COMMISSION MEETING
EVANSVILLE POLICE MERIT COMMISSION
MEETING AGENDA
Monday, May 14, 2018
4:00 p.m. Room 307, Civic Center Complex
- EXECUTIVE SESSION:
- An executive session and a closed hearing will be held prior to the open session.
- The executive session and hearing are closed as provided by:
- I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(5): To receive information about and interview prospective employees.
- I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(6)(A): With respect to any individual over whom the governing body has jurisdiction to receive information concerning the individual’s alleged misconduct.
- I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(9): To discuss a job performance evaluation of individual employees. This subdivision does not apply to a discussion of the salary, compensation, or benefits of employees during a budget process.
- OPEN SESSION:
- CALL TO ORDER
- ACKNOWLEDGE GUESTS
- APPROVAL OF MINUTESÂ
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- April 16, 2018Â (Cook, Scott, and Hamilton)Â
- APPROVAL OF CLAIMS
- PROBATIONARY OFFICER UPDATE
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- Sergeant Steve Kleeman – 12 officers in field training.
- Sergeant Brian Talsma – 4 officers in SWILEA
- APPLICANTS
- 17-046
- 18-028
- 18-188
- 18-137
- 18-172
- MERIT AWARD RECOMMENDATIONS:
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- Officers Kenny Dutschke, Justin Jackson, and Corey Nutt for actions taken on April 18th regarding an armed subject at the Spring Valley Apartments.
- RESIGNATION:
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- Officer Shawn Rhymer, Badge Number 1443, resigned effective May 11, 2018 after serving 3 months and 11 days.
- RETIREMENT:
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- Sergeant Scott Hurt, Badge Number 5153, retiring effective September 1, 2018 after serving 31 years and 18 days.
- DISCIPLINARY MATTERS
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- 18-PO-03 – Officer Marc McDowell, Badge Number 1242 – 1 day suspension. Appealed on 1/25/18. Matter is set for hearing on May 14, 2018.
- 18-PO-04 – Officer Rob Pylant, Badge Number 1257 – 1 day suspension. No appeal filed.  Tabled from April 16, 2018 meeting.
- REMINDERS: The next meeting is June 11th at 4:00pm in Room 307. The meeting scheduled for May 28th is cancelled for the Memorial Day holiday.
Â
- ADJOURNMENT
ADOPT A PET
Tulip is a 1 ½-yr-old female dilute calico. She was surrendered in March. Her $40 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. She is currently living at River Kitty Cat Café so she gets along great with other cats! Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or www.vhslifesaver.org for details!
Â
Evansville Police Release Details Regarding Active Shooter Investigation
Evansville Police Release Details Regarding Active Shooter Investigation
Freeman faces multiple charges including attempted murder with a firearm and criminal recklessness with a firearm. Cullum says he anticipates more charges will evolve over time. Police still have not released information pertaining to what led up to the shooting.
Investigators will release additional information as it becomes available, which will likely be early next week.
Previous Story:
A person involved in Friday night’s incident near Diamond and Kentucky in Evansville is identified as 56-year-old Jeffery Kempf of Evansville. The Vanderburgh County Coroner’s Office says he died in the 2400 block of North Kentucky Avenue. He died from injuries related to a gunshot wound, but the coroner’s office says the death is not a result of police action, and officers have not said what role Kempf may have had in Friday night’s incident.
Around 9:30 Friday night police were called to investigate a shooting near Diamond and Kentucky. When they got there they found one person with injuries. They began searching for a suspect in the case, and they were lead to a nearby home. Officers say as they approached someone started shooting at them. No officers were hit during the incident, but several squad cars were. After about an hour-long manhunt police found the man they believed responsible. Several shots were fired, and shortly after that officers found the man on the ground, and he was taken to the hospital.
The Evansville Police Department says more details in the case will be released today.
Aces Baseball erupts at the plate, outslugs Indiana State in series opener
 Thanks to unexpected power surge at the plate and clutch pitching, the University of Evansville baseball team earned it’s first true road victory of the season and second win in Missouri Valley Conference play, outslugging Indiana State 10-6 Friday night at Bob Warn Field.
The Purple Aces got on the board first, as freshman designated hitter Evan Aders crushed the first home run of his collegiate career off Sycamores starting pitcher Tristan Weaver in the third inning. It was the beginning of a big night for the Jasper, Indiana native, who came into the night batting just .127 for the season.
With school being over, it’s kind of freed my mind up a bit”, said Aders. “I feel like every year, at the end of the year, you have that end of the season feel. It kind of loosens you up a bit. I think the whole team was feeling that. As for me, I’ve just been working on my timing, and it worked out for me.”
Indiana State would bounce back striking for four runs across the next two innings, as the Aces found themselves in a 4-1 hole after four However, UE would bounce back, spearheaded by Evan Aders, who stroked his second home run of the night in the fifth inning, cutting the deficit to 4-2. Freshman third baseman Tanner Craig followed that up later in the frame with a RBI double, tallying sophomore center fielder Kenton Crews, drawing the Aces within one.
“I’m just so proud of him (Aders). He hasn’t been in the lineup in a couple of weeks”, said head coach Wes Carroll. “For him to just stay mentally engaged, working on his craft. For him to go up to the plate, just playing carefree baseball, loose and confident. Running into the first one, with just a smile on his face running around the bases, obviously says a lot about how hard he’s worked in the classroom throughout the course of the year. Hopefully he can build off it over the last couple games of the year.”
Then, in the sixth inning Evansville erupted. It began with senior shortstop Stewart Nelson sending a bases loaded double to the gap in right-center, scoring both Aders and senior catcher Andrew Tanous, giving the Aces a 5-4 lead. A balk would bring in junior right fielder Nate Reeder for an insurance tally, followed by a Kenton Crews ground out, which scored Nelson. Sophomore left fielder Troy Beilsmith capped the five-run eruption with a his seventh home run of the season, and when the smoked cleared Evansville was up 8-4.
Freshman starting pitcher Austin Ruesch went five innings allowing four runs on six hits, while striking out a pair. Sophomore hurler Adam Lukas came in and pitched two innings of shutout work, while senior southpaw Hunter Porterfield allowed a pair of runs in the two frames he tossed.
“Our offense was pretty good”, said Carroll. “But if you saw what our pitchers really worked through, they worked through their own problems. We didn’t go to the pen. We let Austin Reusch work through that inning. He gave up a two-run knock for some RBIs. The next opportunity he was in, he was able to shut the door. You saw the same thing with Adam Lukas. We got great effort from him and Hunter Porterfield as well.”
The Aces would tack on two more runs in the top of the ninth, highlighted by Tanner Craig’s third home run in four games, and Evansville was on it’s way to a 10-6 victory.
The win improves UE’s record to 10-33 on the season and 2-14 in the Missouri Valley Conference, while the loss drops the Sycamores to 24-21 overall and 6-10 in the MVC.
Game two of this three game weekend series is tomorrow back at Bob Warn Field. First pitch is set for 2 p.m. eastern time, 1 p.m. central.
Aces open first day of 2018 MVC Championships
On Friday, the University of Evansville men’s and women’s track and field teams opened with the first day of the 2018 Missouri Valley Conference Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Terre Haute, Ind.
Freshmen Nikki Hutchcraft and Brittany Corley competed for the Purple Aces in the women’s javelin. Hutchcraft and Corley finished back-to-back in ninth and 10th in the event with Hutchcraft edging Corley, 25.16 meters to 20.34 meters. On the men’s side, Ryan Freeman paced the Aces’ contingent with a throw of 34.50 meters, earning the junior a 17th-place finish. Just behind Freeman were Clay Doty and Ian Alberts in 18th and 19th with throws of 33.79 meters and 32.00 meters, respectively.
In the women’s 1500 meter preliminaries, junior Sienna Crews broke the Evansville program record with a time of 4:59.10, placing Crews in 12th among the 19-runner field. Freshmen Lauren Meyer (5:20.42) and Izzy Dawson (5:25.31) followed Crews, finishing in 17th and 19th, respectively. Ricky Hendrix led the way for Evansville’s men in the 1500 meters prelims as the sophomore recorded a time of 4:16.27, earning Hendrix a 15th-place finish. Also running in the 1500 for UE were freshman Timmy Miller (4:43.16), sophomore Jonathan Newby (4:46.72), and freshman Grant Mangan (5:16.38) who finished one after another in 17th, 18th, and 19th.
For Evansville in the men’s 200 meter dash prelims, freshman Aaron Straight represented the Aces, finishing in 22nd, crossing the line in a time of 23.93. On the women’s side, freshman Holli Buretta recorded the fourth-fastest 200 meter dash in program history, with a time of 31.41, placing Burretta in 27th.
Saturday’s action in Terre Haute begins with the conclusion of the women’s heptathlon at 9:30 a.m. (CT) and men’s decathlon at 10:30 a.m. (CT). Field events open with the women’s shot put and men’s high jump at 2 p.m. (CT), while competition on the track starts with the women’s 100 meter hurdles at 4 p.m. (CT), followed by the men’s 110 meter hurdles.
Live coverage of Saturday’s second day of competition will be available starting at 3:45 p.m. on ESPN +.