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Finnerty’s NCAA Title Highlights Record Night at NCAA Championships

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The No. 3-ranked Indiana University men’s swimming and diving team claimed another title on Friday night at the 2018 NCAA Championships at the Jean K. Freeman Aquatic Center in Minneapolis, Minn.

The Hoosiers continue to sit atop the team standings headed in to the fourth and final day of the NCAA Championships on Saturday with a total of 325 points. Texas is second with 306 points, while California is third with 291.5.

Ian Finnerty became the fastest man in history in the 100 breaststroke on Friday night, becoming the first person to break the 50-second barrier in winning the NCAA title with a time of 49.69. With his historic swim, Finnerty set the American, NCAA, NCAA Meet, U.S. Open, Big Ten, school and pool record.

Finnerty is only the second man to win a NCAA crown in the 100 breast, joining Don McKenzie who won the title in 1969. With Finnerty’s win, the Hoosiers have won three NCAA championships in one season for the first time since 1976. Michael Hixon won the 1-meter dive on Thursday, while the IU 400 medley relay also took home a NCAA crown.

Also in the Championship of the 100 breast, senior Levi Brock touched the wall fifth overall with a personal-best time of 51.38. Brock’s time ranks as the fifth-fastest in school history.

The Hoosiers had a great showing in the Championship Final of the 200 freestyle, as Blake Pieroni took second with a time of 1:30.23. After posting the fastest time in history on Wednesday in the event, it took a new American and NCAA record of 1:29.50 from Townley Haas of Texas to beat Pieroni.

Pieroni is the first Hoosier to reach the Championship Final of the 200 freestyle in four-consecutive years since Jim Montgomery from 1974-77. The senior’s time of 1:30.23 is the second-fastest in school history.

Mohamed Samy had a career swim in the event, taking fourth place out of lane 1 with a personal-best time of 1:31.73. Samy’s time ranks as the sixth-fastest all-time.

Hoosier diving was on display in the Championship Final of the 3-meter dive, as the trio of Michael Hixon, James Connor and Andrew Capobianco scored 40 points for IU. Indiana had three divers qualify for the A-Final of the 3-meter dive for the first time since 1968.

Hixon led the way, placing third overall with a total score of 481.90. The newly-crowned 1-meter dive NCAA champion from Thursday, Hixon finishes his illustrious career as a three-time NCAA Champion.

Connor took sixth overall in the event with a score of 433.25, while the rookie Capobianco was eighth with a total of 381.60.

Vini Lanza broke the Big Ten and school record in the 100 butterfly for the second-time on Friday, finishing third overall in the Championship Final with a time of 44.50. Lanza is the first Hoosier to place top-8 in the 100 butterfly in back-to-back seasons since Jim Hersey in 1977-78. His third-place finish is the best for a Hoosier in the event since Gary Hall took second in 1973.

Indiana posted the best result in the 200 medley relay in program history on Friday, as the IU team of Gabriel Fantoni, Finnerty, Lanza and Bruno Blaskovic placed fourth with a school record time of 1:22.87. The previous best finish was fifth in 2008.

In the Consolation Final of the 100 backstroke, Samy accomplished an impressive double, taking 13th overall in the event with a personal-best time of 45.52. Samy improved four spots from his seed time of No. 17 to earn critical points for the Hoosiers.

A total of 10 Hoosiers earned All-America or Honorable-Mention All-America honors on Friday. Pieroni earned his fifth of the week to give him 17 for his career, while both Lanza (14th career) and Finnerty (9th career) earned their fifth of the week as well.

Hixon notched the eighth of his career, while Connor earned his seventh. With two accolades, on Friday, Samy tallied the fourth and fifth of his career. Blaskovic, Fantoni and Capobianco all earned their second, while Brock recorded his first.

The No. 3-ranked Indiana University Hoosiers will continue competition at the 2018 NCAA Championships on Saturday morning with the prelims of the 1,650 freestyle, 200 backstroke, 100 freestyle, 200 breaststroke, 200 butterfly, 400 freestyle relay and platform dive. Action gets underway at the Jean K. Freeman Aquatic Center at 11:00 a.m. ET.

 

JUST IN: PROPOSED AN ORDINANCE REGARDING CITY OF EVANSVILLE  FUNDS ALLOCATED TO ECHO HOUSING CORP.

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AN ORDINANCE REGARDING CITY OF EVANSVILLE FUNDS ALLOCATED TO ECHO HOUSING CORP.ORDINANCE F-2018  INTRODUCED BY COUNCILMAN  Elpers & Weaver

WHEREAS, ECHO Housing Corp. (“ECHO”) receives approximately $80,000 to $130,000 per year from the City of Evansville, which constitutes about five percent (5%) of ECHO’s $2.1 million received in 2016;

WHEREAS, ECHO is the lead agency working alongside the City on Evansville’s Promise Zone initiative, which gives the City certain advantages in obtaining federal grant money;

WHEREAS, ECHO also owns dozens of properties, including two apartment complexes that provide permanent supportive housing to formerly homeless families and veterans;

WHEREAS, ECHO is scheduled to build two more apartment complexes that will provide permanent supportive housing;

WHEREAS, ECHO’s recent executive director, Stephanie TenBarge, stepped down on March 14, 2018, following allegations that she used ECHO money to pay taxes on three of her properties in November 2017, May 2017, and November 2016;

WHEREAS, recent reports suggest Ms. TenBarge may have used ECHO funds for other personal matters beyond property taxes; and

WHEREAS, the Evansville Common Council deems it necessary and proper to enact rules requiring that all City funds allocated to ECHO be withheld for further payment until ECHO provides the City with certain assurances.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED by the City Council of the City of Evansville, Indiana as follows:

Section 1. Appropriation Direction. All City of Evansville funds previously allocated to ECHO Housing Corp. (“ECHO”) shall be withheld for further payment or allocation until ECHO provides the City with (1) an independent, third-party audit of ECHO’s finances covering the past three years, and (2) evidence satisfactory to the Common Council of Evansville demonstrating new ECHO policies and procedures in place to address and prevent fraud or embezzlement from occurring in the future.

Section 2.Effective Date. This ordinance shall be in full force and effect on the day of its final passage and adoption.

PASSED BY the Common Council of the City of Evansville, Indiana, on the ___ day of _________________, 2018, and on said day signed by the President of the Common Council and attested by the City Clerk.

ATTEST:

____________________________ ____________________________

James Brinkmeyer Laura Windhorst, City Clerk

President of the Common Council City of Evansville, Indiana

Presented to me, the undersigned, City Clerk of the City of Evansville, Indiana, and to the Mayor of said City, the ____ day of ________________, 2018, at _____ o’clock __.m. for his consideration and action thereon.

____________________________

Laura Windhorst, City Clerk

City of Evansville, Indiana

Having examined the foregoing ordinance, I do now, as Mayor of the City of Evansville, Indiana, approve said ordinance and return the same to the City Clerk this _____ day of ______________, 2018, at ___________o’clock __.m.

____________________________

Lloyd Winnecke, Mayor

City of Evansville, Indiana

“READERS FORUM” MARCH 24, 2018

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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?

WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that the ECHO Board of Directors made a major mistake by refusing to file a report with the EPD concerning alleged financial improprieties at the agency?

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.

 

 

 

 

 

Projects Under Vectren’s Electric Grid Modernization Plan Continue

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Projects Under Vectren’s Electric Grid Modernization Plan Continue

Evansville, Ind. – Crews working for Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana – South (Vectren) are continuing efforts to upgrade portions of Vectren’s substations and transmission and distribution networks to maintain reliable electric service. Through the next few months, approximately 70 projects – investments of more than $12 million – will be completed as part of the Smart Energy Future strategy. Projects aimed at upgrading Vectren’s electric infrastructure will continue to take place throughout the southwestern Indiana territory over the electric grid modernization plan’s seven-year period.

When possible, impacted customers will receive direct communication about the upcoming work, especially for projects that require a service interruption. Upcoming projects include:

Circuit (a specific grouping of poles and lines delivering power) rebuild and conversion projects– upgrading and replacing hardware and equipment on the circuit, which leads to shorter restoration times, a reduction in the number of emergency repairs needed and increased system performance and integrity  

  • Evansville: Red Bank circuit (north of Claremont Avenue) serving 1,885 customers
  • Evansville: S. Weinbach Avenue circuit (along Weinbach Avenue, between Walnut Avenue and Chandler Avenue) serving 194 customers
  • Evansville: Washington Avenue circuit (between Weinbach Avenue and Villa Drive) serving 438 customers
  • Evansville: First Avenue circuit (north of Morgan Avenue) serving 55 customers
  • Evansville: Mt. Auburn circuit (along St. Joe Avenue between Bismark Avenue and Bement Avenue) serving 686 customers
  • Mt. Vernon: East Main circuit (between Chestnut Street and Main Street, north of Water Street) serving 157 customers
  • Mt. Vernon: North Main circuit (between Wolflin Street and SR 69, north of Fifth Street) serving 313 customers
  • Newburgh: Newburgh circuit (along SR 662 from Grimm Road to Yorkshire Road) serving 1086 customers

Underground cable replacement projects – replacing aging underground cable, which leads to a reduction in risk of unplanned outages, faster outage restoration when outages occur and reduced customer interruption duration by sectionalizing the area in need of repair

  • Evansville: Shady Hills (along Bob Court Drive, east of Old State Road) serving 460 customers
  • Chandler: Cambridge Acres (along Washington Avenue between Cambridge Court and Cairo Court) serving 50 customers
  • Mt. Vernon: Indian Mounds circuit (along Bluff Road in the Port Indiana) serving 268 customers
  • Santa Claus: Christmas Lake (throughout Christmas Lake Village) serving 956 customers

Substation equipment upgrades/replacements – replacing/upgrading substation equipment such as circuit breakers to reduce risk of unplanned outages and reduce the risk of potential safety hazards to the public and Vectren employees

  • Evansville: Grandview substation serving 400 customers
  • Evansville: Northwest transmission substation serving 16,526 customers

Wood pole replacements – inspect, treat and replace, when necessary, utility poles to address urgent and emergent situations as they are identified. This work will continue throughout Vectren’s electric service area over the next several years. Benefits include reduced risk of pole-related safety hazards to the public and Vectren crews as well as improved reliability, particularly during weather events.

Generally, customers will notice projects beginning when crews have placed signage in the area. The duration of these projects usually span two to six weeks, barring weather delays.

Customers can learn more about Vectren’s grid modernization plan and its customer benefits atwww.vectren.com/SmartEnergyFuture.

 

 

Unemployment Insurance At Historic Lows In Indiana

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Unemployment Insurance at Historic Lows in Indiana

 Indiana’s unemployment rate continues to fall. The Hoosier state’s unemployment insurance claims are also at historic lows.

For February, Indiana’s jobless rate was 3.2 percent. The national average is 4.1 percent.

The state’s total labor force stands at more than 3.3 million, and Indiana is enjoying a nearly 64 percent labor participation rate which is also better than the national average.

Construction and trade, transportation and utilities saw the biggest gains.

Tyrone Morris

Web Producer

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MEDICINE TIME By Jim Redwine

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GAVEL GAMUT By Jim Redwine

MEDICINE TIME

  • Last week we gave some attention to a problem we all know exists but that we wish we could make go away with pixie dust. It is not that you and I or our fellow citizens are uncaring about children and families caught in the maelstrom of child and spousal physical abuse or child sexual abuse or child neglect or alcohol and drug addiction. It is we instinctively know the cure will be painfully expensive and emotionally exhausting, to say nothing of how the resources we dedicate to these problems must be diverted from others. On the other hand, we know if we do not address our Children in Need of Services crisis now society will certainly pay a much greater price later. And that need for current and future self-preservation does not even consider our moral obligations.

When Peg notices a chore at JPeg Ranch that must be done (by me, of course), there is a fairly consistent litany of the procedure. She notes something, say a decaying window sill, moles multiplying like moles, a tree about to fall in the pond, well, you get the idea. Here is how things normally progress. I pretend deafness and blindness. When that wears thin I tell her I will take care of it on the weekend. Sometimes I tell her it probably would be cheaper to wait until we have a full-blown disaster. Finally, she prevails with threats of making me turn off a ballgame or, the unkindest of all, saying she will just call someone else to do it.

At this point, I will have to go to Bud’s Hardware at least twice because I can never find where I stored the bolts or screws, etc., from the last time I jerry-rigged a project. Then it comes down to actual manual labor and occasionally a trip to the E-Room for repair of the repairer.

Well, my fellow Posey County citizens that’s where we are with our Child in Need of Services (CHINS) situation. We must take our medicine. As the Circuit Court Judge in charge of judicial solutions to these matters, I have been approached by numerous fellow public servants and other concerned citizens with suggestions. Just last week after a morning spent in a two-hour hearing involving one very blended family that required eight publicly appointed attorneys I ran into Posey County Councilman Aaron Wilson who told me he believed we should consider creating a Posey Circuit Court Magistrate position that would be dedicated to children and family cases. This approach to our current crisis has many reasonable elements and great potential benefits, not the least of which is the saving of taxpayer money.

Of course, as Aaron said, our first obligation is to provide public services, but we should attempt to do so in a reasonable manner. Efficiency in government is a good thing. Let’s examine my case from last week.

Because the Posey Circuit Court is charged with handling many important matters besides CHINS cases and there is only one Circuit Judge and only one Circuit Courtroom cases must be jammed into artificial schedules. For example, the same week as the case in question I had a criminal felony and misdemeanor cases, probate matters, civil lawsuits, divorce cases and innumerable logistical issues to address. So the CHINS cases had to be stuffed into the space of one day, mainly one morning.

This required numerous publicly appointed attorneys in other cases to wait for hours as we processed the one in front of me. Of course, many citizens were also forced to simply wait around as if the Court were an emergency room at a city hospital. Such a procedure is more akin to the watching sausage being made analogy than seeing justice delivered.

With this in mind, next week I will try to put some drywall compound on Councilman Wilson’s excellent suggestion of a Posey Circuit Court Magistrate, unless, of course, Peg fills my time with as yet unseen disasters at The Ranch.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

Conour Spars With Court At Re-Sentencing Hearing

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

If you ask convicted fraudster William Conour how many victims he’s liable to, he’d tell you only one – and even that one isn’t entitled to any money.

Instead, Conour – a now-disgraced personal injury and wrongful death attorney – says the victim in the one count of wire fraud he pleaded guilty to, James Fox, was never actually entitled to receive the $450,000 settlement Conour negotiated for him because the negotiations weren’t through. Plus, Fox was compensated for his alleged losses after filing a complaint in Delaware, Conour said, so he’s no longer owed any money.

Conour made that and other arguments to Indiana Southern District Judge Richard Young on Thursday, when he once again was re-sentenced to 10 years in federal prison. The former attorney pleaded guilty to wire fraud in 2013 after he was accused of stealing roughly $6 million in settlement funds from 36 clients.After pleading guilty in 2013 and being sentenced to 10 years and $6.5 million in restitution, Conour successfully had his sentence overturned on appeal twice. The most recent reversal was in December when the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals found he was not given an opportunity to allocate.

In light of that resentencing, the U.S. government urged Young to be on guard against arguments that Conour, rather than the 36 clients he stole from, is a victim. Conour put forth several arguments along those lines on Thursday when he made an hour-long presentation detailing the reasons why he believed the court’s findings were inaccurate.

The former attorney began his presentation by saying he was and still is a good attorney who takes his ethical and professional responsibilities seriously, despite resigning from the Indiana bar in light of his 2012 indictment and arrest. He listed several professional organizations he belonged to, including 10 years of service with the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission, and said that involvement should give pause when people hear the allegations against him.

Conour then launched into an explanation about why the Indiana Rules of Professional Conduct — particularly rule 1.15 — permitted him to commingle client and personal funds in his attorney trust account. Many of Young’s findings focused on Conour’s use of his trust account to steal or misuse his client’s settlement funds.

Conour then segued into a discussion of Fox’s case, which stemmed his representation of a client who sustained a broken leg on a construction site. The court’s findings showed that Conour signed off on a settlement without Fox’s knowledge or approval, but Conour claimed he was allowed to sign documents on behalf of his clients under the terms of his contracts. He also maintained that Fox had repudiated the settlement and that a related lien had not yet been satisfied, which means the money Fox claimed he was owed had not yet come due.

Young frequently looked puzzled throughout Conour’s presentation and repeatedly asked if his comments should be taken to mean he wanted to withdraw his guilty plea and was disavowing any responsibility he had for his fraudulent actions. Such questions frustrated Conour, who told the judge that no one in the courtroom understood personal injury law, which had led to an unjust sentence.

In response, Young told Conour that everyone understood wire fraud and the loss that comes with it. But Conour was adamant that he was not liable for any loss because Fox was not yet entitled to his money.

The Indianapolis native also maintained that because he only pleaded guilty to wire fraud as it related to Fox, the stories of his 35 other victims were nothing more than “relevant information” that should not be held against him. Those victims agreed to sign an annuity with Reliance Financial Services in Ohio, which agreed to send monthly payments to Conour’s clients up to the number of their settlements.

But rather than depositing the full settlement funds into a Reliance trust, Conour would send an annual check to the bank to fund the costs of the annuities each year. He withheld remaining funds to fund his extravagant lifestyle, then pulled from other client settlements to fund the annuity trusts each year.

Conour, however, maintained the annuities were valid, legal agreements signed between Reliance and his clients. That means that if any money is owed, it would be Reliance’s responsibility to pay it back, he said. Plus, much of the money owed has not yet come due, so Conour maintained the loss of future funds should not be held against him.

But Eugene Miller, an assistant U.S. district attorney based in Illinois, likened Conour to a magician and said his arguments were nothing more than a distraction from the truth: that he intentionally stole from his clients and used the funds to support his desired lifestyle. Miller said Conour’s comments showed he refused to accept responsibility for his actions and requested that the judge re-sentenced him to 135 months, the maximum he could receive.

Like Miller, Young was undeterred by Conour’s arguments, telling the defendant at one point that he felt he should send the case to a jury trial since he seemed to be contradicting his plea. He also read Conour’s statement from his original 2013 sentencing, where Conour expressed remorse and took full responsibility. The judge said Conour’s comments on Thursday were contradictory to his original comments.

But Conour told the judge he stood by his original apologies, yet was permitted to make legal arguments in an attempt to mitigate his sentencing. He also said Young’s resistance to Conour’s arguments could be taken to mean he was maliciously paying Conour back for appealing his sentence.

Prior to sentencing Conour to 10 years and $6.5 million for the third time, Young noted that in his original sentencing statement, Conour said he was operating under the “delusion” that his theft from his clients was permissible as long as he paid them back. Looking to Conour’s arguments on Thursday, Young said he appeared to still be under the delusion that he had no responsibility for depriving his clients – all of whom were vulnerable due to their injuries – of millions of dollars.  However, Young also noted that it was difficult for him to sentence a fellow attorney.

As the hearing proceeded, Conour’s family, seated in the audience, frequently wiped away tears. As he was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs and chains, they waved goodbye and called out, “Love you, dad.”

 

Summer Musical Auditions

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Auditions for this year’s PEF/EVSC Summer Musical, “Hello Dolly!” are coming soon for cast, orchestra and crew. “Hello Dolly!” marks the 30th annual EVSC/PEF Summer Musical. Performances will be July 12 – 15 at the Old National Events Plaza.

Auditions dates and times include:
  • Cast auditions will be Wednesday, April 4 or Thursday, April 5, from 3:30 to 8:30 p.m. both days at the Academy for Innovative Studies, Diamond Avenue. Students can
    sign up for an audition time either Wednesday or Thursday. Callbacks will be Tuesday, April 10, from 3:30 to 8:30 p.m.
  • Orchestra auditions will be done via video using Google Classroom. Orchestra audition videos are due by midnight Friday, March 23.
  • Crew information: students interested in serving as crew members are asked to complete a crew application.
For complete information, including what is required for auditions, and to sign up for an audition time, submit an orchestra audition or fill out a crew application, visit www.sites.google.com/evsck12.com/2017summermusical/.