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Left Lane Violation leads to DUI Arrest with Child inside Vehicle

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Vanderburgh County – Saturday morning at approximately 3:35, Trooper Tyler Widner was patrolling Diamond Avenue near Kratzville Road when he stopped the driver of a 2010 Toyota for driving in the left lane at a reduce speed.  The driver was identified as John Robertson, 23, of Evansville.  Further investigation revealed Robertson was under the influence of alcohol. Robertson also had four passengers inside the vehicle, which included a 19-year-old, an 18-year-old, a 16-year old and an 18 month old baby.  Robertson refused to submit to a chemical test. He was arrested and taken to the Vanderburgh County Jail where he is currently being held without bond.

Arrested and Charges:

  • John Robertson, 23, Evansville, IN
  1. Driving While Intoxicated with a Passenger less than 18 years of age, Class 6 Felony
  2. Driving While Intoxicated (Refusal), Class C Misdemeanor
  3. Driving While Intoxicated-Endangerment, Class A Misdemeanor
  4. Operating a Vehicle without ever Receiving a Driver’s License, Class C Misdemeanor

Arresting Officer: Trooper Tyler Widner, Indiana State Police

Assisting Officer: Trooper Zack Fulton, Indiana State Police

Eagles Shutdown By Griffons, 3-1

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The 16th-ranked University of Southern Indiana baseball team was shutdown by Missouri Western State University, 3-1, in the second game of a three-game series Saturday afternoon at the USI Baseball Field. USI watched its record go to 5-3, while Missouri Western State went to 6-9.

The Screaming Eagles conclude the three-game with the Griffons Sunday at noon. Coverage for the games can be found on GoUSIEagles.com.

USI took a 1-0 lead in bottom of the fourth. Senior third baseman Sam Griggs (Evansville, Indiana) scored from third when senior first baseman Nick Gobert (Jasper, Indiana) hit into a double play. Griggs had reached on an error and advanced to third on a single by freshman designated hitter Aaron Euler (Evansville, Indiana).

Missouri Western State rebounded to take a 3-0 lead with a pair of runs in the sixth and one in the seventh off of USI starting right-hander Kyle Griffin (Morganfield, Kentucky) and sophomore right-handed relieverTyler Hagedorn (Evansville, Indiana). Griffin finished his day with a no-decision, allowing one run on two hits and two walks and striking out seven.

Hagedorn (1-1) took the loss after going two innings, giving up two runs, one earned, on four hits in relief.

Eagles earn two wins to begin PFX Spring Games

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University of Southern Indiana Softball rallied from a pair of two-run deficits to earn two wins on the opening day of the PFX Spring Games Saturday morning.

The No. 13 Screaming Eagles (8-4) began the day by scoring four unanswered runs in a 4-2 win over Midwest Region foe Cedarville University. They came back from an early 2-0 deficit to defeat the University of Minnesota Duluth, 5-3, in the second game of the day.

Sophomore outfielder Allison Schubert (Nicholasville, Kentucky) was a combined 3-of-4 at the plate with a home run, double and four RBIs to lead the Eagles.

USI returns to action Sunday with games against No. 19 Winona State University (Noon CST) and Holy Family University (4:30 p.m.).

USI 4, Cedarville 2 (Box Score)
After spotting the Yellow Jackets (3-4) a 2-0 lead, the Eagles scored runs in the fourth, fifth and sixth innings to pull out the win.

Junior pitcher Courtney Atkisson (Bringhurst, Indiana) had an RBI-single in the top of the fourth inning to cut Cedarville’s lead in half, while Schubert’s sacrifice fly in the next frame tied the score at 2-2.

Later in the fifth, the Eagles got an RBI-single from junior catcher Lindsey Barr (Whitesville, Indiana) to move in front, 3-2, while Schubert’s RBI-double in the sixth added an insurance tally.

Atkisson (3-0) earned the win for the Eagles after giving up two runs, one earned, off five hits in seven innings of work. She allowed three walks, but struck out four batters to snare the win.

USI 5, Minnesota Duluth 3 (Box Score)
Schubert’s two-run bomb in the last half of the first inning tied the score at 2-2 and gave the Eagles momentum heading into the remainder of the contest.

USI capitalized on a pair of Minnesota Duluth errors in the second inning to score two more runs and build a 4-2 advantage.

The Bulldogs (6-3) cut USI’s lead in half with a tally in the fourth inning, but an RBI-double by senior third baseman Mena Fulton (Bloomington, Indiana) in the sixth inning gave the Eagles an insurance run heading into the final frame.

Sophomore pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky) earned the win after surrendering three runs, two earned, off six hits to a team that was averaging 9.9 runs and 12.4 hits per game coming into the contest. Leonhardt (4-2) allowed two walks while racking up a season-high 11 strikeouts.

“READERS FORUM” MARCH 4, 2018

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WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

We hope that today’s “Readers Forum” 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?

Todays “Readers Poll” question” Is: Do you feel that City Council has more pressing issues than worrying about amending the current noise ordinance?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

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Eagles Earn Two Wins To Begin PFX Spring Games

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Eagles Earn Two Wins To Begin PFX Spring Games

Printable Box Scores: Cedarville | Minnesota Duluth

CLERMONT, Fla.—University of Southern Indiana Softball rallied from a pair of two-run deficits to earn two wins on the opening day of the PFX Spring Games Saturday morning.

The No. 13 Screaming Eagles (8-4) began the day by scoring four unanswered runs in a 4-2 win over Midwest Region for Cedarville University. They came back from an early 2-0 deficit to defeat the University of Minnesota Duluth, 5-3, in the second game of the day.

Sophomore outfielder Allison Schubert (Nicholasville, Kentucky) was a combined 3-of-4 at the plate with a home run, double and four RBIs to lead the Eagles.

USI returns to action Sunday with games against No. 19 Winona State University (Noon CST) and Holy Family University (4:30 p.m.).

USI 4, Cedarville 2 (Box Score)
After spotting the Yellow Jackets (3-4) a 2-0 lead, the Eagles scored runs in the fourth, fifth and sixth innings to pull out the win.

Junior pitcher Courtney Atkisson (Bringhurst, Indiana) had an RBI-single in the top of the fourth inning to cut Cedarville’s lead in half, while Schubert’s sacrifice fly in the next frame tied the score at 2-2.

Later in the fifth, the Eagles got an RBI-single from junior catcher Lindsey Barr (Whitesville, Indiana) to move in front, 3-2, while Schubert’s RBI-double in the sixth added an insurance tally.

Atkisson (3-0) earned the win for the Eagles after giving up two runs, one earned, off five hits in seven innings of work. She allowed three walks but struck out four batters to snare the win.

USI 5, Minnesota Duluth 3 (Box Score)
Schubert’s two-run bomb in the last half of the first inning tied the score at 2-2 and gave the Eagles momentum heading into the remainder of the contest.

USI capitalized on a pair of Minnesota Duluth errors in the second inning to score two more runs and build a 4-2 advantage.

The Bulldogs (6-3) cut USI’s lead in half with a tally in the fourth inning, but an RBI-double by senior third baseman Mena Fulton (Bloomington, Indiana) in the sixth inning gave the Eagles an insurance run heading into the final frame.

Sophomore pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky) earned the win after surrendering three runs, two earned, off six hits to a team that was averaging 9.9 runs and 12.4 hits per game coming into the contest. Leonhardt (4-2) allowed two walks while racking up a season-high 11 strikeouts.

Notes: Junior second baseman Claire Johnson (Pittsboro, Indiana) extended her hitting streak to 11 games with hits in both games…Johnson also recorded her team-best fifth triple of the year, just three short of the single-season record.

Southern Indiana 4, Cedarville 2 (Mar 03, 2018 at Clermont, FL)

———————————————————————-

Southern Indiana…. 000 121 0 -  4  9  2      (7-4)

Cedarville………. 011 000 0 -  2  5  1      (3-4)

———————————————————————-

Pitchers: Southern Indiana – Atkisson, Courtney and Barr, Lindsey. Cedarville – Arbogast, Morgan

and Woerner, Kaitlyn.

Win-Atkisson, Courtney(3-0)  Loss-Arbogast, Morgan(2-2)  T-2:05  A-50

Weather: Sunny

Game: 11-CED

Southern Indiana 5, Minnesota Duluth 3 (Mar 03, 2018 at Clermont, FL)

———————————————————————-

Minnesota Duluth…. 200 100 0 -  3  6  2      (6-3)

Southern Indiana…. 220 001 X -  5  8  1      (8-4)

———————————————————————-

Pitchers: Minnesota Duluth – Hohol, Valerie and Janigo, Lexi; Bren, Jessica. Southern Indiana –

Leonhardt, Jennifer, and Barr, Lindsey.

Win-Leonhardt, Jennifer(4-2)  Loss-Hohol, Valerie(4-1)  T-1:35  A-78

HR USI – Schubert, Allison.

Weather: Sunny

Game: 12-UMD

Guns In Church Bill Stalling Out In House

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Guns In Church Bill Stalling Out In House

By Abrahm Hurt
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — Legislation to allow guns in churches appears to be faltering in the Indiana House.

Senate Bill 33 would permit a licensed gun owner to carry a firearm onto church property that has a school. For three days it has been on the House calendar and for three days in a row, Rep. Mike Speedy, R-Indianapolis, has declined to bring it up for discussion and amendments.

Current law bars guns on school property but SB 33 aims to change that, allowing the gun owner to carry the weapon when attending worship, working or volunteering at the church.

Speedy said he has not made a decision on whether he will call the bill for discussion and amendments.

“Still trying to figure out the amendments and understand all their implications and just trying to understand them,” he said.

Currently, 19 amendments have been filed to change the bill, ranging from banning bump stocks on assault rifles to stripping and replacing the language of the bill.

Rep. Jim Lucas, R-Seymour, proposed an amendment that would bar the state from regulating firearms, ammunition and their accessories at all. He has long held the position that Second Amendment guns rights are absolute.

Rep. Ben Smaltz, R-Auburn, wants to strip the language of the current bill and replace it with wording similar in content to House Bill 1424, which would drop licensing fees for lifetime gun permits. HB 1424 has passed the Senate and is on the Appropriations Committee.

House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, said he did not know if the bill was in trouble, but added, “There’s some concern about the appropriateness and the timing right now.”

Just two weeks ago, a gunman entered a Florida high school and opened fire, killing 17 people and injuring dozens more. The events have sparked debate at both the state and federal level about the availability of guns and whether they should be more tightly regulated.

Speedy said it was an appropriate time to discuss gun legislation.

“I think it’s an appropriate time to discuss freedom of houses of worship to protect themselves even if they have a school,” Speedy said.

FOOTNOTE: Abrahm Hurt is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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Commentary: A Flag Emptied Of Meaning

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana Rep. Milo Smith, R-Columbus, has peculiar notions of what patriotism and freedom mean.

Smith has made national news. He’s proposed a state law that would require the Indianapolis Colts to issue refunds to any football fans upset if players take a knee during the playing of the national anthem.

That’s right. A state representative wants the state to dictate both how players exercise their First Amendment rights and how a business handles its customer relations.

All in the name of small government, of course.

Such inconsistency is typical of Smith, who has built an impressive record of making a mockery of the principles sacred to a self-governing society of free people.

During the last session of the Indiana General Assembly, he – all by himself – shut down consideration of legislative attempts to curtail gerrymandering in the state. Gerrymandering is the dark science of political mapmaking so one party or the other has an unfair advantage of the other.

Gerrymandering’s effect is to warp or even undermine the will of a free people. It allows legislators – government – to choose their constituents rather than enabling constituents to choose their lawmakers.

Smith didn’t offer much of an explanation for his decision to kill redistricting reform.

But, then, a legislator from a gerrymandered district never has to offer much of an explanation for anything.

That, though, wasn’t the high-water mark for Smith’s arrogance and hypocrisy.

A few years ago, when the legislature was considering the ill-advised attempt to impose a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, Smith presided over a committee hearing on the measure.

He lectured those opposed to the ban that they couldn’t boo when the ban’s supporters testified on its behalf, but he didn’t stop those supporters from applauding when one of their champions spoke.

When the ban’s opponents tried to demonstrate their opposition by silently making a thumbs-down motion, Smith told them they couldn’t do that, either. One man in the balcony of the House chamber turned his thumb down while Smith spoke.

Smith ordered the capitol police to throw the man out of the hearing – thus denying the man two First Amendment rights, the right of free speech and the right to petition government for redress of grievances.

As the man marched out, the ban’s supporters applauded.

Smith did nothing to silence them.

Smith says his proposal to force the Colts to offer refunds if some of the team’s players protest during the national anthem came about because he attended a game where that happened. He stayed for the whole game, but said the act just didn’t sit right with him.

It was disrespectful, he said.

Disrespectful to the flag.

Disrespectful to those who have served this country in the military.

The American flag is a symbol.

Among other things, it is supposed to be a symbol of our devotion as a nation to preserving certain principles. Those principles include freedom of conscience, our right to make our own moral judgments about the things our government, our elected officials and even our country has done in our name.

The test of our devotion to those principles is our willingness to protect those rights even when they are exercised by those with whom we disagree.

Even those who make our blood boil.

Or who do things that just don’t sit right with us.

That’s the part of the American creed the Milo Smiths of this world just don’t – just can’t – understand.

For Smith and others like him, freedom means that everyone has the freedom to think the same things they do.

And, no, their motivation isn’t about respect for the flag or for our service men and women.

The man Smith tossed out of the committee hearing on the same-sex marriage ban did something memorable as he left.

He carefully, meticulously, unfolded an American flag and draped it over his shoulders as he marched out.

When he was outside the chamber, he refolded Old Glory with the same sort of military precision.

It turned out he was a veteran. He’d spent 20 years in the U.S. Air Force, serving with distinction.

Smith tossed a flag-draped military veteran out of a legislative hearing just for trying to exercise constitutional rights.

And that seemed to sit just fine with Milo Smith.

FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits” WFYI 90.1 WFYI Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

This article is posted  bty the City-County Observer without bias, opinon or editing.

Making Sense by Michael Reagan

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Making Sense by Michael Reagan

President Donald Trump said a bunch of crazy things this week.

Nothing new there.

I’m not referring to the global trade war he may have started on Thursday with his announcement that steep protective tariffs on foreign steel and aluminum could be coming as early as next week.

I’m referring to the tougher gun control laws the president publicly floated on Wednesday during an unscripted discussion with bipartisan lawmakers in the White House.

Sounding more like Nancy Pelosi than a lifelong friend of the National Rifle Association, the president suggested three steps he thinks would help to prevent future mass school shootings like the one in Parkland, Fla.

He proposed raising the age limit to buy assault-type weapons like the AR-15 to 21, making background checks tougher on, 9all, 9gun buyers and taking guns away from people with mental problems.

In the real world, where there are more than 300 million guns floating around the United States, Trump’s first two actions will do nothing but burden law-abiding gun owners.

The president’s third idea – taking someone’s guns away for mental-health reasons and making them go to court to get them back – is especially outrageous.

Forget the serious constitutional concerns about taking law-abiding citizens’ guns and doing the due process, 9,9later.

Does Mr. Trump have any clue,9 how impossible it would be to determine who was truly crazy and dangerous and needed to have his or her guns seized?

Does he realize the dangerous road his idea would send us down?

“Hello 911? The guy next store is cutting his lawn sideways. He’s really crazy. You better come and take his guns away.”

And my Congresswoman Maxine Waters thinks the president is mentally ill.

Do you say, “I’m sorry, Mr. Trump, someone says you’re crazy? You have to give us your guns.”

Trump’s gun control ideas are not worth the breath he spent on them.

The most obvious reason the Parkland school tragedy happened was that the FBI and the local police screwed up – despite multiple warnings.

A less obvious reason the shooter was not stopped before he could take 17 innocent lives was the “parental” failure of his mother and the family he lived with after she died last year.

Those adults knew he was mentally ill, angry and dangerous, yet they did little to get him the help he needed.

Few parents agree to have their kids treated for being mentally ill because it reflects poorly on them. Fewer still will turn their own kids into the police.

But talk about bad parenting skills.

The couple the teenage killer was living with at the time of the shooting knew he had a bunch of guns and did nothing to get them out of their house.

They locked his weapons in a safe, but the shooter easily made a spare key for himself. Apparently, th,9e couple,9 never met a teenager before.

Parkdale was a tragedy that could have been averted with, 9the, 9common sense that all parents should employ.

A good friend of mine, a hunter who owns several, 9guns, was having trouble with one of his kids and had to put him on Ritalin.

After the boy had an out-of-control moment, the father took every one of his guns out of the house and gave them to a friend to keep for him.

If you have a kid you think is mentally ill, and you have guns in your house, you shouldn’t look to the government to solve the problem.

You should, 9solve it, 9yourself. Remove the guns from, 9the, 9house. Don’t put them in a safe. Get them out.

If we are not going to take responsibility for being good parents when it comes to guns, don’t be surprised when Donald Trump or the government takes that responsibility away from us.

FOOTNOTE: Mike’s column is distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. The CCO posted this article without opinion, bias or editing.