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Indiana State Police Increases Impaired, Dangerous Driving Patrols for March Madness and St. Patrick’s Day

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Your Indiana State Police is joining law-enforcement agencies across Indiana this March to increase dangerous and impaired driving patrols for the NCAA Tournament and St. Patrick’s Day.

Last year, the weekend beginning St. Patrick’s Day had the highest number crashes involving impaired drivers. With March 17, 2018 falling on a Saturday, police are conducting random patrols, saturation patrols and sobriety checkpoints intended to make our roads safer.

“This is when we celebrate a time honored Hoosier tradition, March Madness and basketball,” said Indiana State Police Superintendent Doug Carter. “However if you drink, your plans should include a designated driver, ride sharing program, or taxi to get you home safely from your celebration. Troopers will be out looking for those drivers who fail to heed this advice and will provide another form of transportation to those drivers; but it won’t be to their home.”

The top causes of all Indiana traffic crashes are drivers following too closely and failing to yield the right of way. Aggressive, distracted and impaired driving reduce reaction times to unexpected slowed traffic, bicycles and pedestrians.

New impaired-driving equipment

In every state, it is illegal to drive with a blood alcohol concentration of .08 or higher. In Indiana, drivers under 21 with a BAC of .02 are subject to fines and a license suspension for up to 1 year.

Last year the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute (ICJI) and National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA) purchased 1,759 new portable breath tests for Indiana law-enforcement agencies. An additional 836 devices will be purchased this year.

But unlike alcohol, there is no quick field test for the legal and illegal drugs that can impair drivers. ICJI and NHTSA are issuing Android tablets and apps to assist 185 highly-trained police officers in the recognition and enforcement of drug-impaired driving.

If you’re taking a new drug or higher dose, talk with your doctor or don’t drive until you know how it affects you. Even over-the-counter medication such as cold medicine or sleep aids may cause impairment, especially when combined with alcohol or a second drug.

Aces Defeat Southern Illinois In Big Senior Day Win

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UE Takes 75-44 Win Over Salukis

 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – In what may have been the top team performance of the season, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team led wire-to-wire as they earned a 75-44 Senior Day win over Southern Illinois at the Ford Center.

Evansville (17-14, 7-11 MVC) opened the game on a 7-2 run and added to the lead from there, going up by as many as 34 points in the largest margin of win in a league game for UE since defeating Bradley, 67-35, on January 9, 2016.

“We asked our guys to play for the seniors today and they did a great job today.  They knocked it out of the park,” Aces head coach Marty Simmons said.  “The team did a great job and we look forward to carrying this momentum to St. Louis.”

Ryan Taylor was the leading scorer for the Aces for the ninth game in a row, posting 25 points on 10-of-18 shooting.  Dru Smith, playing in his first game since Feb. 10, scored 14 while Blake Simmons finished with 12 in his final home game.  Simmons, along with fellow seniors Duane Gibson and Dalen Traore, made the start on Saturday.  Gibson had a stellar game, posting 8 points and 8 assists while Traore had 2 points and 3 rebounds.

“This was a big win for us, we hope this can give us some momentum heading into the tournament,” Gibson explained.

Southern Illinois (19-12, 11-7 MVC) was Armon Fletcher and Tyler Smithpeters record 11 and 10 points, respectively.

It was the senior class carrying the load early on for the Purple Aces, posting the first nine points of the game.  Duane Gibson had the first two buckets before Blake Simmons scored the next five UE points.  His triple gave his team a 7-2 lead.

After SIU got within two, Dru Smith, playing his first game in two weeks, scored on a drive to the basket to push the lead to 11-7.  His basket set the Aces on a 13-0 run as the Salukis went scoreless for six minutes while missing seven shots in a row.  Tyler Smithpeters ended the drought for SIU with his second long ball of the day to make it a 20-10 game with 8:08 left in the half.

Despite getting back within ten, the Saluki offense continued to struggle, finishing the half at 23.8%.  With under four minutes on the clock, Ryan Taylor down his second triple to push the lead to 17 and in the final seconds, Noah Frederking was true from downtown to send the Aces to the half with a 36-17 lead.  Evansville shot 62.5% in the opening stanza.

Four of the first five UE shots found the bottom of the net to open the second half as the lead grew to 24 points at 46-22.  Taylor and Simmons each had tripled in the run.  With over eight minutes left in the contest, the lead reached 30 on a jumper by Gibson and the advantage grew to as many as 34 points when another Taylor triple pushed the lead to 73-39.  In the final minute, the Salukis hit a three to cut the final margin for the Aces to 31 – 75-44.

UE completed the game shooting 56.4% while holding the Salukis to just 31.0%.  The Aces also finished with a 35-24 advantage in rebounding.

Evansville picked up its 8th win in the last 10 Senior Day games and UE’s class of Duane Gibson, Blake Simmons, and Dalen Traore will remember it forever.

“I could not have asked for a better day,” Simmons said.  “To have the kind of day we did is something that we will all remember for the rest of our lives.”

For Traore, it was more than just a game.  During his postgame speech, he proposed to girlfriend Marly Solano and she said yes.

“I was pretty confident all week, but I am so happy right now,” Traore said.  “I was not thinking about that beforehand, the game was my main focus.  All week we have been talking about how focused we wanted to be today.”

His teammates joined him on the court for the proposal and explained what they mean to him.

“The team is family to me.  These guys are my brothers.”

Arch Madness in St. Louis is the next stop for the Purple Aces as they will open the tournament on Thursday.  The opponent and game time will be finalized as soon as the latest RPI is released on Sunday morning.

University of Evansville Baseball Team Swept By Kennesaw State

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ATLANTA, Ga. – Despite big offensive displays in both ends of a doubleheader, the University of Evansville baseball team (1-5) was swept by Kennesaw State (3-4), 10-9 and 8-6, in Atlanta Saturday afternoon.

In the opening contest, the Purple Aces raced out to a quick 4-0 lead highlighted by a three-run first, led by senior designated hitter Travis Tokarek’s 2-run home run to right, his first of the season. Sophomore center fielder Kenton Crews added to the pad in the second frame with an RBI infield single.

The Owls would winnow the lead down to 5-3 as junior starting pitcher Alex Weigand got tagged for a solo home run by Forrest Bramlett in the bottom of the 2nd inning, followed by a 2-run single off the bat of Jake Franklin.

However, the Aces kept swinging. In the 4th inning sophomore shortstop, Craig Shepherd drove in Crews on an RBI single. Then, Andrew Tanous delivered a base hit to center, scoring Shepherd, pushing the lead back up to four runs.

In the 5th, sophomore first baseman Troy Beilsmith lifted a run-scoring lace to left, bringing home freshman third baseman Tanner Craig. Another first-year player, second baseman Pete Vaccaro, followed that up sending a single back up the middle, tallying Beilsmith to push UE’s lead to 9-6.

Weigand would leave the game after five solid innings, striking out six, while allowing three runs on six hits and three walks. However, the bullpen couldn’t hold the lead. Jimmy Ward got the first two outs of the sixth, but the third was not so easy. Kennesaw State’s Grant Williams drove in one run on an RBI double down the left field line. Then Ward uncorked a wild pitch that allowed another run totally, cutting the Evansville lead to 9-5.

The Owls would continue slugging in the 7th, forcing a pitching change, with Nathan Croner relieving Ward. Croner got a strikeout, then was quickly pulled for Matt Brady. However, Brady’s luck was not as good, as the Aces lone fielding error of the game allowed one run to score. Then, Garrett Hodges kept the rally going with a run-scoring single up the middle, dropping the UE lead down to two.

Brady came back out for the 8th, and after giving up a walk and a double was tagged for a game-tying 2-run single by Jake Franklin, knotting it up at nine.

Sophomore closer Adam Lukas took over for Brady in the ninth, and after getting the first out of the frame, gave up the game-winning walk-off solo home run to Hodges, as the Owls took a 10-9 decision.

“The energy was good and we put ourselves in a position to win the first game, but we couldn’t find a way to close the door,” said University of Evansville head coach Wes Carroll. “We had a disastrous 6th inning on the mound that we could not recover from.”

Game two of the twin bill saw the Aces bounce back from an early deficit, behind 2-run home runs off the bats of Dalton Horstmeier and Andrew Tanous to build a 5-1 lead on Kennesaw State after five innings.

However, sophomore starting pitcher David Ellis couldn’t get out of the sixth frame, charged with three runs. Reliever Nathan Croner couldn’t stop the bleeding, giving up two more tallies without registering an out. Freshman reliever Austin Ruesch would finally put out the fire, but UE was down 7-5 after six innings.

The Aces would attempt a rally in the 7th, as freshman third baseman Tanner Craig would driving Craig Shepherd on an RBI single to center, cutting the deficit to one.

But Evansville would draw no closer, and Kennesaw State would add an insurance run in the bottom of the frame, and go onto win 8-6.

The Aces will look to avoid the sweep tomorrow in the series finale in Atlanta. First pitch from Stillwell Stadium is at 12 p.m. central time.

Traffic Stop Nets Over 140 Grams of Meth

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At approximately 12:57 this morning, Trooper CJ Boeckman stopped the driver of a 2010 Dodge Charger for driving 44 mph in a 30 mph zone on SR 257 in Otwell.  The driver was identified as John Allen, 33, of Petersburg and the passenger was identified as Edward Simison, 40, of Washington.

Due to suspicious activity, Trooper Boeckman searched the vehicle and discovered 144 grams of methamphetamine, a small amount of heroin, drug paraphernalia and a syringe loaded with suspected heroin. Allen and Simison were arrested and taken to the Pike County Jail where they are currently being held without bond.

Arrested and Charges:

  • John Allen, 33, Petersburg, IN
  • Edward Simison, 40, Washington, IN
  1. Dealing Methamphetamine, Class 2 Felony
  2. Possession of Methamphetamine, Class 5 Felony
  3. Possession of Heroin, Class 6 Felony
  4. Unlawful Possession of a Syringe, Class 6 Felony
  5. Maintaining a Common Nuisance, Class 6 Felony

“READERS FORUM” FEBRUARY 24, 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 its time that the masses assemble in Washinton DC to protest the need to change our current gun laws?

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.

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us CityCountyObserver@live.com.

EVSC Responds to National Student Walkout

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School officials at Central High School in Evansville braced for a student walkout Friday but it didn’t happen. Rumors were flying about a walkout to protest gun violence.

They would have joined other student protests around the country in response to the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

Central High School officials say they were ready in case the walkout happened. While this was only rumor officials are keeping a close eye on all events, real or threatened.

EVSC Chief Communications Officer Jason Woebkenberg says, “If students can figure out a way to do that in a respectful, organized, peaceful manner, then we would perhaps work with and consider talking to student leadership groups in our schools that would want to lead that type of thing next month so we’ve actually started that dialogue, it’s at the beginning stages of that.”

A national student walkout is reportedly scheduled for March 14th.

School officials wouldn’t say if any disciplinary action will be taken against students who stage or join walkouts.

They say disciplinary action is decided on a case by case basis.

Tyrone Morris

Web Producer

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Commentary: Hoosier Students, Advisers Deserve Better

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By Ryan Gunterman
TheStatehouseFile.com

They deserve better than this.

Hoosier student journalists and their teachers deserve better than what the Indiana House of Representatives did to them the evening of Feb. 5. They deserve better than the fear mongering by the associations representing principals, superintendents and school boards while lobbying those legislators. They deserve better than to be told the most-important 45 words in U.S. history apply to everyone but them, that they are second-class citizens.

What they deserve is for “New Voices” HB 1016, protections for student journalists, to be law.

They deserve to see their state values them, and their ideas, as a part of their communities and democracy as a whole. However, that’s not the message delivered from those running their government and schools.

Ryan Gunterman, executive director, Indiana High School Press Association

No, instead they were told the opposite.

Students heard Rep. Tony Cook, R-Cicero, tell them mass chaos and violence would occur if they were given the rights granted to the rest of the public. He told them censorship isn’t really a problem, and their pleas for freedom from suppression were based off a couple rare instances of prior restraint.

It didn’t matter 13 other states have passed similar legislation and survived. It didn’t matter that more than 180 years of combined case law has yet to find a school liable for student expression in those same states. It also didn’t matter that the Indiana High School Press Association was working on five separate censorship cases when Cook told his colleagues it wasn’t happening.

That’s what he told them.

Students then heard Rep. Wendy McNamara, R-Evansville, tell them they lacked the brain development to properly use the First Amendment. She told them they needed to only model the behavior exhibited by the adults in their lives, doing otherwise could result in the deterioration of the school environment.

It didn’t matter that examples of the professional press depending upon the reporting of college and high school students can be found in nearly every state. It didn’t matter that scholastic journalists have improved their communities by addressing problems ranging from opioid abuse to underage drinking when school officials and legislators were unable, or unwilling, to do so.

That’s what she told them.

Finally, students heard Rep. Bob Morris, R-Fort Wayne, tell them their request to be treated equally is an effort “to make the school look the same way as these people that write about the fake news on a daily basis.” He told them administrators must have the final say in the editorial process, even though students and advisers have more experience in the field than anyone within their school.

It didn’t matter separate studies by the University of Kansas and Indiana University have shown those in scholastic journalism are better students and citizens than their peers. It didn’t matter that Indiana teachers are required to earn a journalism certification before teaching the course that instructs future reporters on how to avoid being “these people that write about the fake news.”

That’s what he told them.

Cook, McNamara, Morris and the other 43 representatives who voted against HB 1016 sent students this message, inaccuracies and all, because it’s what principals, superintendents and school boards told them to do. Why else would the very same politicians who approved similar legislation 88-4 in 2017 prevent its passage merely a year later?

It might have something to do with the fact that last year administrative associations didn’t begin lobbying against the First Amendment until New Voices, then HB 1130, had moved out of the House and into the Senate. Once those groups did begin their campaign of scare tactics and myth distribution, the bill was never called to a vote and died.

Student journalists and their teachers didn’t deserve it then, either.

No, what they deserve are advocates such as Rep. Ed Clere, R-New Albany, and Rep. Ed DeLaney, D-Indianapolis, who co-authored the legislation in 2017 and 2018. What they deserve are the tireless efforts of the Hoosier State Press Association, Indiana High School Press Association and Indiana Collegiate Press Association.

What they deserve are principals such as David Clark of Columbus North High School, who told the House Education Committee a free student press is what’s best for everyone within the school community. What they deserve is someone like Plainfield High School student Anu Nattam, who stood up to legislators because she is unwilling to accept her school administrators’ suppression.

What Hoosier students and teachers deserve are leaders who will stand up for them, not against them.

Instead, they got the Indiana House of Representatives.

They deserve better.

FOOTNOTE: Ryan Gunterman is the executive director of the Indiana High School Press Association, which is affiliated with Franklin College.

IT’S STILL NOT GUNS

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Making Sense by Michael Reagan

During the intense media coverage of Wednesday’s tragic events in Parkland, Fla., I was shocked to hear it was the 18th school shooting so far this year.

18. In 45 days.

That sounds terrible.

That sounds like a huge American crisis that needs to be addressed immediately by our great leaders in Washington.

But that 18 number, which the anti-gun lobby in the media has emphasized without going into the details of the individual incidents, is highly misleading.

None of those previous shootings was anything like the horrible one on Wednesday that left 17 students and teachers dead at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

The year’s worst previous shooting, which happened in Kentucky at a high school less than a month ago, left two students dead and 14 wounded by gunfire.

The only other death was a single murder that occurred on a college campus.

Two of the shootings that occurred at one of the country’s 120,000 public and private schools this year were suicides.

Some involved guns firing accidentally. And most of the other incidents were random shootings on public school property that resulted in no one being hurt.

But these details of the earlier shootings didn’t matter to religious anti-gun nuts in the media like Don Lemon of CNN and liberal politicians like Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut.

Before we knew hardly anything about the Parkland shooting they were offering their usual simplistic solution for stopping what Murphy exaggeratedly called “this epidemic of mass slaughter” in our schools.

To no one’s surprise, they called for new laws to control or outlaw guns, especially semi-automatic rifles like the AR-15.

Lemon and Murphy will never give up their gun-control pipe dreams.

But those of us who live in the real world know that no law will ever be devised or enforced that can stop a determined mass killer from getting his hands on a gun if he wanted one badly enough.

Anyway, guns aren’t the problem. There are 300 million of all kinds floating around the country. An infinitesimal fraction are used by people to hurt other people.

But there has to be something going on in our society that has caused angry, evil or mentally disturbed young men to plan and carry out these rare mass shootings at Columbine, Sandy Hook and Parkland.

Is it because of social media? Violent video games? Bullying in schools? Broken families? Anti-depressant drugs? Boredom? All of the above? Something else?

Whatever the cause, we need to sit down as a country and figure out how we can identify, help or stop crazy or violent individuals before they carry out their deadly attacks.

Meanwhile, forget the gun-control politics. If we really want to protect our kids in schools we have to get serious.

We need to put guards in our schools – armed guards, not spectators.

We need make sure any potential mass killer, young or old, knows that our schools are no longer “gun free” zones.

Better yet, as Judge Andrew Napolitano of Fox News suggests, we need to copy the Israelis.

For years they’ve successfully protected their schoolchildren’s lives from attack with strong fences, locked gates, careful ID checks and cameras.

But they’ve also done the smartest thing – arming and training classroom teachers who can defend against intruders. And no one knows which teacher is packing a gun.

Increasing security at our nearly 100,000 public schools to prevent future Parklands will cost us a lot of money.

Local districts and the states should pay most of the tab. But how about this idea:

Instead of the federal government raising my gas tax 12 cents a gallon and pretending it’s going to be used to fix our highways, why not use the money to hire guards for our schools – and give them guns they know how to use.

FOOTNOTE: THIS ARTICLE WAS POSTED BY THE CITY COUNTY OBSERVER WITHOUT ANY OPINION, BIAS OR EDITING.

We hope that article 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?”