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BREAKING NEWS: EPD Investigating Police-Involved Shooting

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EPD Investigating Police-Involved Shooting

An investigation is underway following a police action shooting. The incident occurred in the 4600 Block of Spring Valley Road just off North Green River and south of Lynch Road.

When officers responded to a 911 call for a sexual assault that had just occurred. The victim said the suspect was armed and had just left, but said he was going to come back.

While officers were investigating the assault, the suspect returned to the scene. He ran from officers but was unable to escape. During a confrontation with two EPD officers, the suspect was shot by police.

The suspect was rushed to an area hospital with gunshot wounds. No officers were injured.

Both detectives and Crime Scene Technicians are on the scene. The original assault and the police action shooting are being investigated at this time.

Anyone with information about either incident is asked to call EPD.

Stay with 44News online and on-air more updates.

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Lady Eagles Walk-Off With Game Two Win To Salvage DH Split With KWC

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University of Southern Indiana Softball scored twice in the bottom of the seventh inning of game two to salvage a Midwest Region doubleheader split with visiting Kentucky Wesleyan College Tuesday night at the USI Softball Field.

Senior third baseman Mena Fulton (Bloomington, Indiana) led the Eagles at the plate, going a combined 3-for-5 with a double and an RBI.

The Screaming Eagles (24-17) return to action Saturday at noon when they travel to Rolla, Missouri, to take on Missouri University of Science & Technology in a Great Lakes Valley Conference doubleheader.

Game 1: KWC 4, USI 3 (Box Score)
Kentucky Wesleyan (19-20) scored four unanswered runs to earn the 4-3 victory and snap the Eagles’ six-game winning streak.

The Eagles capitalized on an error in the bottom of the first inning to score a pair runs and take a 2-0 lead. Fulton and junior outfielder Caitlyn Bradley (Forest, Indiana) each had RBI-singles for the Eagles.

Sophomore outfielder Allison Schubert (Nicholasville, Kentucky) had an RBI-double in the third inning to put the Eagles up 3-0; but the Panthers capitalized on a pair of walks and an error to score a pair of runs in the fourth inning.

Kentucky Wesleyan used a pinch-hit, solo home run off the bat of junior Jaclyn Parker to tie the score in the sixth; while sophomore second baseman Lexi Mullen hit a solo home run in the seventh to put the Panthers up, 4-3.

Sophomore pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky) was charged with the loss after giving up two runs off two hits. Leonhardt (12-9) racked up seven strikeouts and just one walk in three innings of relief work.

Game 2: USI 2, KWC 1 (Box Score)
Junior second baseman Claire Johnson (Pittsboro, Indiana) drew a bases-loaded walk in the bottom of the seventh inning to push across the winning run after USI scored the tying run on a fielding error in the previous at-bat.

USI trailed 1-0 heading into the seventh inning after the Panthers scored in the top of the sixth inning on a passed ball. Schubert drew a walk to lead-off the inning, while Fulton had a bunt single to put runners at first and second with no outs.

Sophomore shortstop Taylor Ricketts (Georgetown, Kentucky) drew a one-out walk two batters later to load the bases. After a fly ball out failed to push across the tying run; senior outfielder Olivia Clark-Kittleson (Carbondale, Illinois) hit a ball to the shortstop that was mishandled, allowing the tying run to cross the plate.

The first three pitches to Johnson missed the strike zone and, following a strike, Johnson held up on a close pitch that missed the zone for ball four and the walk-off walk.

Junior pitcher Haylee Smith (Florence, Kentucky) earned the win after getting the Eagles out of a jam in the sixth inning. Smith (4-3) spelled Leonhardt, who gave up one run off four hits in five-plus innings of work, with runners at first and second and no outs in a one-run game in the sixth. She recorded outs against six of the eight batters she faced, allowing just two hits and fanning two batters.

 

Baseball Aces play #10 Vandy tough before falling in Nashville

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Behind strong pitching, the University of Evansville baseball team kept things tight with tenth ranked Vanderbilt, however, the Purple Aces couldn’t catch the Commodores on the scoreboard, falling in Nashville, Tennessee, 6-1, Tuesday night.

Junior starting pitcher Austin Allinger looked sharp in pitching the opening of the frames, allowing just one hit while tossing a pair of scoreless innings.

Allinger would give way to freshman reliever Austin Ruesch, who got a pair of quick outs to open the third inning. However, the third out of the frame proved to be tougher to get. After giving up a two out double to Connor Kaiser, Ruesch got tagged on a two-strike pitch by Vandy’s leading home run hitter, Ethan Paul, giving the Commodores an early 2-0 lead. That would be Ruesch’s lone mistake, as he kept Vanderbilt off the scoreboard for the next two innings.

Sophomore reliever Nathan Croner would take over for Ruesch in the sixth, and would get into hot water immediately, hitting the leadoff batter, then walking another, putting a pair aboard with nobody out. Croner would bounce back to get the next two outs, and appeared to be on his way to getting out of the jam. Then, Jayson Gonzalez snuck a single through the left side of the infield, tallying a pair of insurance runs, putting UE in a 4-0 hole.

Meanwhile, the Aces bats struggled to break through in the runs column. That is until the seventh inning. It began with sophomore outfielder Troy Beilsmith drawing a leadoff walk. Next, senior first baseman Dalton Horstmeier singled to right-center, sending Beilsmith to third. Then, senior designated hitter Travis Tokarek, playing in his first game in a month due to injury, drove in Beilsmith with a ground out to first base, putting the Aces on the scoreboard.

However, Evansville would draw no closer and the Commodores would add to their pad in eighth with Ethan Paul’s second round tripper of the game. Vanderbilt would tack on another in the frame,  going onto take a 6-1 decision.

The loss drops the Aces to 6-24, while Vandy improves to 23-14. The University of Evansville baseball team is back in action Friday night at home against the newest member of the Missouri Valley Conference, Valparaiso. First pitch for game one of the series is set for 6 p.m. at Charles H. Braun Stadium.

USI dominates KWC, 10-2

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The University of Southern Indiana baseball team dominated the first meeting of the year with Kentucky Wesleyan College, 10-2, Tuesday evening at the USI Baseball Field. USI watched its record go to 19-16 overall, while KWC goes to 18-19.

The Screaming Eagles opened the scoring with a tally in the first on an RBI-single by senior rightfielder Buddy Johnson (Shelbyville, Kentucky) and one the third on an RBI-ground out by junior designated hitter Brodie Brown(Carmi, Illinois) to make the score, 2-0.

After the Panthers evened the score, 2-2, in the top of the fourth, USI bounced back with two in the bottom half of the frame to take the lead for good. Senior leftfielder Drake McNamara (Mt. Vernon, Indiana) gave the Eagles the 4-2 advantage with a two-run double to center field.

USI sealed the victory with a six-run seventh to run the margin to 10-2. McNamara ignited the offensive explosion by leading off the frame with his team-best seventh home run of the year, a towering shot to left field. Senior third baseman Sam Griggs (Evansville, Indiana) also had a two-single to help lead the six-run eruption.

Overall for the game, McNamara and Griggs finished the game with a team-high three and two RBIs, respecitively, while senior first baseman Nick Gobert (Jasper, Indiana) had a team-best three hits with two runs scored.

USI senior right-hander Nick Coudret (Newburgh, Indiana) posted his second win of the year in dominate fashion. Coudret (2-2) threw seven strong innings, allowing two runs on five hits and striking out a career-high seven batters.

Sophomore right-hander Jacob Bowles (Mt. Washington, Kentucky) and junior right-hander Dalton Lewis(Parker, Colorado) finished the game for the Eagles with scoreless eighth and ninth innings.

The Eagles continue the four-game homestand Friday when fourth-ranked University of Tampa (31-5) comes to the USI Baseball Field for a three-game set. First pitch for the series is set for 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday and noon Sunday.

USI trails the all-time series with fourth-ranked Tampa, 6-3, after the Spartans took two of three from the Eagles to start the 2017 campaign. The Eagles are 2-5 against the Spartans during the regular season meetings and 1-1 during the two match-ups in the NCAA II National Championship Series. USI infielder Joe Redburn led the Eagle hitters in last year’s three-game series at Tampa with a .500 average (four-of-eight) and tied for a team-high with four RBIs and junior right-hander Austin Krizan (Mt. V

“IS IT TRUE” APRIL 18, 2018

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We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” 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?

IS IT TRUE that a new development is planned for Downtown Evansville? …that the development will be called “POST HOUSE?” …this will be a residential and commercial project located between the Old Post Office, Old Greyhound Bus station building, and Fifth Third Bank’s tower? …this project will be developed by Scannell Properties of Indianapolis.
IS IT TRUE if all the bureaucratic approvals are granted this development could receive around $9 million dollars from Indiana’s Regional Cities program?  … it’s been rumored that this project may cost around $50 to $60 million dollars to build? …we wonder how much the Evansville DMD and the Winnecke administration have quietly committed towards this project?  … there is currently no construction timeline for this project?   …this proposed project includes sub-ground parking, will have around 17,000 square feet of retail space on the lower level and 144 apartments on the upper floors?  …this project has a lot of bureaucratic hoops to jump through before it can even begin?  …because of the location of this project, the developers may encounter numerous unexpected infrastructure and environmental challenges that will add expensive change orders to the project?  …the developer better be prepared to pay for the site and architectural design work out of pocket because it may take awhile for them to receive approval from the Evansville Redevelopment Commission, a release from the Indiana Department of Homeland Security and the Indiana Regional Cities group?
IS IT TRUE at yesterdays County Commission meeting Commissioner Cheryl Musgrave voted no to approving the February and March account payable vouchers and two professional services claims? …Commissioners Ungethiem and Shoulders voted in favor of paying the above claims declaring that they were incorporated in the 2018 County Commission budget?
IS IT TRUE that County Commissioner Musgrave voted no to allowing BINGO to continue to take place every Friday evening at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum?….Mrs. Musgrave claimed she didn’t want “gambling” to continue at this county facility?  ….that Commissioners Ungethiem and Shoulders voted yes to continue allowing Bingo to be held at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum? …they claimed that Bingo is the number one income producing event held at the Coliseum?  ..Commissioners Ungethiem and Shoulders believed that without Bingo being allowed to be played at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum the facility would have to shut down?
IS IT TRUE if you compare the financial reports of the City of Evansville from March 31, 2016, to March 31, 2017, you will find that the City of Evansville employee hospitalization expenses has increased by several millions of dollars?  …we are told by reliable sources that serious financial troubles are just around the corner for the City of Evansville because of the out of control city employee health care costs?
IS IT TRUE during his last year in office City Councilman John Friend, CPA sponsored a “separation of funds ordinance” in order to ensure that the City Controller would not manipulate general fund balances?  … upon the urging of the City Controller and the former City Council Finance Chairman, Dan McGinn the newly elected City Council voted to repeal of this ordinance?  ...that the money collected from all sources are now put into one fund account which makes it extremely hard to track on how much money is in each city account?
IS IT TRUE that on December 31, 2019, the Indiana State Board of Accounts will be requiring that all cities must use the accrual method of accounting?  …that Ft. Wayne, South Bend, and Indy have been using the accrual method of accounting for a number of years?
IS IT TRUE it time for the At-Large City Councilman and Finance Chairman Jonathan Weaver, to request the Winnecke administration to begin to implement a spending reduction plan? …on January 1, 2012, the City of Evansville operational funds (collectively) had a beginning balance of $32,146,610.80?   …as of January 1, 2018, that the operational funds (collectively) balance was $6,414,918.62? …from January 1, 2012, to January 1, 2018, the operational account was reduced by $25,731,692?  … January 1, 2018, operational fund balance also included the unauthorized $12,500,000 transfer by the City Controller from the Riverboat Fund?
IS IT TRUE many of our readers are still wondering why City Councilman John Hayden, CPA, and CFE (Certified Fraud Examiner) is so eager to release $500,000 of Federal and State money to ECHO Housing before the results of EPD Police Investigation and Forensic audit are made public?  …all we can say is we have no idea why Mr. Hayden wants to release these funds and recommend that you contact him personally to find out the answer? …that the Forensic audit on ECHO Housing started yesterday and will take a month to complete?
Todays “Readers Poll” question is: If the election for the United States Senate was held today who would you vote for?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “Statehouse Files, Channel 44 News, Daily Devotions, Law enforcement, Readers Poll, Birthdays, Hot Jobs, and Local Sports.

You are 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

 

Moss To Hiring People To Knock Doors To Spread The Word

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Door Knockers Will Be Paid $80 A Day plus Free Hotel Accommodations

Our movement to retire ‘Liberal Larry’ Bucshon is growing! We’re hiring a handful of people to help knock doors and spread the word.

Do you know someone who might be interested? A bit about the job:

  • Full-time and part-time opportunities April 28-May 7
  • Pays $80 a day plus free hotel accommodations
  • Stationed in Terre Haute and Evansville
  • Must have reliable transportation and a smartphone

Please, share this with your friends and family. Interested parties can apply or learn more by contacting the campaign at hq@rmoss4congress.com or (812) 205-1226.

Commentary: Donald Trump, Innocence At Home And Abroad

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – Donald Trump’s head must be a strange place to live these days.

Walls seem to collapse all around him.

The files of his close friend, personal attorney and fixer now are in the possession of the FBI. Special counsel Robert Mueller apparently is ready to report on four avenues of obstruction of justice. The president also appears to be headed to litigation with two women – a porn star and a former Playboy Playmate – who claim he had sex with them and then bullied or misled them into non-disclosure agreements. The courts seem inclined to allow suits by other women who contend he sexually assaulted them to proceed. And a new book by former FBI Director James Comey – whom Trump fired – promises fresh humiliations and new threats for the president.

The larger world also is in disarray.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, has opted to retire, leaving public service with all the courage and dignity of a rodent fleeing a burning house. The markets dance like yo-yos while the president flirts with a trade war with China. Trump vows, then disavows, then vows again to fire missiles at Syria. And North Korea continues to bedevil the United States and the world.

Everywhere this president turns, chaos greets him – most of it of his own making.

While we all try to tiptoe through this tragic funhouse mirror world President Trump has fashioned, I find myself pondering the nature of the man at the center of the upheaval.

What possessed him to run for president?

The fact that he worked so hard to silence women and other figures from his past proves he knew he had baggage, episodes in his life that would not reflect well on him.

But he chose to run anyway.

All human beings are flawed creatures. Some, despite their flaws, choose to devote themselves to a greater cause, either as an act of service or as a means of redemption.

But that’s not Trump.

What would his greater cause be?

Making America Great Again?

By building a wall – one he seems to forget about until he gets into trouble and needs to rally his base again? Passing a tax cut that rewards the Wall Street buccaneers about which his most devoted supporters railed and against whom he campaigned? Starting a trade war with China that will punish the parts of America that voted for him with the most fervor?

No, it wasn’t devotion to a cause that prompted him to do this.

It was innocence.

Not innocence in the moral sense, but rather in terms of arrested development.

This president looks at the world in a binary way. He sees only those who are with him and those who are against him – and those who are with him must be with him all the way, on every question.

He is quick to threaten consequences for those he sees as “against” him, but he is apparently incapable of imposing any discipline on himself.

One sign of maturity – of moving from childhood to adulthood – is the ability to accept responsibility. We learn to say:

I must give thought to what I say and do because my actions have consequences. If I don’t think about what I say and do, I can do harm to others – and to myself.

At the heart of this maturity is an awareness that we are not the world. We are merely a part of the world.

That realization never seems to have dawned on Donald Trump.

He saw the White House in childish terms, as a prize he deserved, rather than as a duty to which he should bend himself.

Part of the reason adolescence can be such an awkward stage of life is that its lessons are hard, even thorny. It can be difficult to grasp that the larger world exists on its own terms, not simply as an extension of one’s desires.

Because he does not see the world as anything but a vehicle for his appetites, President Trump cannot accept responsibility for the chaos he has unleashed or the damage his actions have done to others and himself.

Innocence to the nature of life prompted him to run for an office for which he was entirely unqualified.

His innocence now threatens him.

His innocence threatens us all.

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.

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23AndMe At-Home DNA Test Helping Trace your History

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23AndMe At-Home DNA Test Helping Trace your History

At-home DNA kits are very popular, even among the 44News staff. Several people at 44News have taken the tests and received some surprising results along the way.

In March, we introduced you to our 44News evening producer, Jessica Dixon. Over the years, Jessica heard stories from her mother’s side of the family, but she knew nothing about her father’s family.

After years of not knowing exactly where her ancestors came from, Jessica now has some answers.

For a link to the Ancestry.com DNA kit, click here:
Ancestry.com At-Home DNA Kit Information

For a link to the 23AndMe DNA kit, click here:
23AndMe At-Home DNA Kit Information

To see the first part of our story with Jessica, click here:
23AndMe DNA Tests Help People Trace their Past

Amanda Decker