http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/jail-recent-booking-records.aspx
Online Software Company Announces Expansion, New Jobs
Online Software Company Announces Expansion, New Jobs
Staff Report
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – A company that develops online training software announced Thursday that it is expanding its Indianapolis headquarters and will more than double its staffing by 2020.
Executives of Lessonly joined Gov. Eric Holcomb in announcing plans to add 102 new high-wage jobs.
“Entrepreneurs are finding success here and propelling Indiana to the forefront of technology and innovation,†Holcomb said in a statement. “Lessonly is a true example of the way Hoosiers identify and solve 21st Century challenges for businesses across the nation. Because of companies like Lessonly, all eyes are on Indiana, and I’m excited to see what the future holds for Lessonly and for our growing tech sector.â€
Lessonly was co-founded in 2012 by Max Yoder to develop customized training software for sales and support teams. Customers include NBC News, Trunk Club, Ibotta and Thumbtack.
“We’re extremely proud to call Indianapolis home,†Yoder said in a statement. “We’re working hard to reimagine training software for millions of people across the globe, and this city is our bedrock.â€
Lessonly has committed to investing about $2 million in the business over the next five years, which includes plans to enhance its current facility at 407 Fulton St. in Indianapolis.
According to the Indiana Economic Development Corporation, Lessonly has doubled in size every year since its founding and currently has 83 full-time employees. The company is currently hiring for sales, product and engineering, business development and others roles, which are expected to offer salaries 50 percent than the state’s average.
IEDC has offered Lessonly up to $1.1 millions in conditional tax credits and up to $200,000 in training grants based on the company’s job creation plans. These incentives are performance based, meaning until Hoosiers are hired, the company is not eligible to claim incentives.
FOOTNOTE:Â TheStatehouseFile.com is a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students
ALABAMA STUPIDITY
ALABAMA STUPIDITY
Making Sense by Michael Reagan
Democrats can dream all they want.
They and their soulmates in the liberal media can celebrate the victory by Doug Jones in Alabama’s U.S. Senate race until next fall.
They can continue to fool themselves into thinking that Republican candidate Ray Moore’s narrow defeat was a sign from above that the Democratic Party will regain control of Congress in 2018.
And that Moore’s defeat will prove to be the beginning of the end for President Trump.
But what happened on Tuesday in the reddest state in America – the state Donald Trump won by a landslide – was not a harbinger of the death of the GOP.
The Moore-Jones contest was a bizarre one-off – a controversial, nationally publicized, expensive, hard-fought special election featuring a horrible Republican candidate that will go down as one of the most embarrassing races in modern electoral history.
Jones, the Democrats and Trump-hating media have good reason to high-five each other over their victory – in the short run.
But the biggest loser on Tuesday was not President Trump, who publicly supported Moore in the final days.
It wasn’t even the incompetent GOP, whose meddling national leadership made Jones’ seemingly impossible win possible.
The biggest loser by far was Steve Bannon, Roy Moore’s chief cheerleader and future puppet-master.
Moore was his “flawed†candidate, as I’ve heard some people in the GOP call him.
“Flawed�
I’m not an establishment Republican. But I know stupid when I see stupid.
MOORE WAS ACCUSED OF SEXUAL MOLESTATION!
AND HE WAS NOT ABLE TO CONVINCINGLY DEFEND HIMSELF!
That’s why Moore lost.
That’s why so many Republican women stayed home.
That’s why so many Republicans would not put their party’s political interest above a candidate who had been credibly accused of molesting teenagers decades ago.
That’s why 22,780 Alabamans cast write-in votes – 2,000 more than Jones’ margin of victory.
Moore and his backward brand of Christian “conservatism†were an embarrassment to Republicans long before he was accused of molesting teenagers half his age.
No matter how important it was to preserve the GOP’s slim majority in the Senate, President Trump and the Republican National Committee never should have jumped back in the game and backed Moore.
Now the Moore loss is hung around their necks – and they’ve given the Democrats a great campaign ad for the 2018 elections:
“Hello voters. We don’t support child molesters. Republicans do.â€
Nevertheless, all this happy talk in the liberal media about the Moore-Jones race being a referendum on Trump is simply not true.
It was a referendum on Moore and Bannon. That’s all.
In fact, President Trump actually dodged a bullet when Moore was not elected.
Moore would not only have been an ongoing GOP embarrassment. He would have been a Bannon puppet in the Senate, not a Trump puppet or a Mitch McConnell puppet.
What Republicans have to do now to keep control of the Senate is what President Trump said – find better candidates.
That’s not going to be easy.
Anyone running for office today has to be willing to have anything bad they did in their entire life plastered on the front page of the local paper.
Everyone, including me, did something wrong or stupid in their life they don’t want to see made public.
So President Trump may want the GOP to find better candidates, but good luck on that.
Jesus died on the cross a long time ago.
EDITORS FOOTNOTE: Â This article was posted by the City County Observer without bias, opinion or editing.
School District Cleared After Teacher Convicted Of Child Seduction
Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
A northern Indiana school corporation has been cleared of legal wrongdoing in the events leading up to the arrest of a high school teacher who was having a sexual relationship with a student. A district court judge granted the school district’s motions for summary judgment on Thursday.
Jakob Robinson, a physical education teacher at McCutcheon High School, part of the Tippecanoe School Corporation, met 14-year-old Jane Doe 2 when she was a freshman. The two developed a mentorship relationship and often spent time together at school, with Doe working as Robinson’s teacher’s assistant and spending her lunch hours in the physical education office.
The two then began spending time together outside of school, but when Doe’s mother, counselors and other local parents raised concerns about the relationship to the school’s principal, John Beeker, they either denied or did not indicate the relationship was sexual. However, Robinson and then-16-year-old Doe had begun a sexual relationship during her junior year and would have sex on school grounds.
All instances of sexual intercourse occurred away from the school, and in one instance Robinson took Doe to his parents’ home during the school day to have sex. Assistant principals Michael Lowrey and Fred Roop followed Doe and Robinson to the home, then returned to the school and accessed his email account. While none of the messages between the two were inappropriate, some had been sent late at night.
Meanwhile, Doe and Robinson concocted a plan in which they went to McDonald’s after leaving his parents’ house and purchased drinks so that they could tell people they had gone to lunch. Thus, when Beeker called Doe into his office that day, she carried her McDonald’s cup with her, causing him to believe the lie.
Robinson was arrested at the start of the spring semester in January 2015 after police found evidence of his communications with Doe. The girl’s mother then filed the instant case against the school corporation, Beeker and Roop, alleging violations of 42 U.S.C. section 1983 and Title IX protections.
Judge Rudy Lozano granted summary judgment to the defendants on each of those motions on Thursday, noting initially the girl’s mother failed to respond to the motion for summary judgment on the Section 1983 claim, thus waiving her argument under that section. Turning to the alleged Title IX violations, Lozano addressed two central issues: whether the district and school administrators had actual knowledge of Robinson’s misconduct, and whether they had acted with deliberate indifference to that conduct.
Though Beeker may have suspected an inappropriate relationship existed between Robinson and Doe, the plaintiff failed to present evidence that he had actual knowledge of the sexual relationship, Lozano wrote. Under Hansen v. Board of Trustee of Hamilton Southeastern School Corp., 551 F.3d 599, 604 (7th Cir. 2008), “a plaintiff in a Title IX damages suit based on a teacher’s behavior must prove … actual knowledge of misconduct, not just actual knowledge of the risk of misconduct …,†he wrote.
“Robinson and Doe only hugged, kissed or engaged in sexual activity in private,†the judge wrote. “They were never seen by anyone engaging in such conduct. Plaintiff is aware of no adult who had any information about the fact that Robinson and Doe were having a sexual relationship.â€â€™
Further, Doe’s mother failed to prove the district and school officials acted with deliberate indifference to Robinson’s conduct, Lozano said, considering Beeker sought information from school officials, parents and Doe and Robinson themselves to determine if their relationship was inappropriate. Thus, the defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the Title IX claims, he said.
The plaintiff also raised a negligence claim against the defendants, but because the court dismissed the Section 1983 and Title IX claims, it no longer had jurisdiction to consider the negligence issue, Lozano said. He also remanded all remaining claims — which included the plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment on the issue of contributory negligence, the defendants’ motion to limit or exclude expert witnesses, and the plaintiff’s motion for leave to supplement an expert’s qualifications — back to the Tippecanoe Circuit Court.
Robinson previously appealed his sentence of eight years, with five years executed and three years suspended to probation, in Jakob Robinson v. State of Indiana, 79A02-1603-CR-522. The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld his sentence on his child seductions sentences in September 2016.
The federal case is Jane Doe, as mother and natural guardian of Jane Doe 2 v. Tippecanoe School Corporation, John Beeker and Fred Roop, 4:15-cv-00056.
Adopt A Pet
Biscuit is a female calico cat. (That kinda goes without saying… calicos are almost always female… but she wanted you to know.) She resides at the River Kitty Cat Café and has been waiting on a home since July! Biscuit’s just over a year old. She’s spent half her life in the shelter’s care, and she’s really ready to just be on somebody’s couch. Biscuit’s adoption fee is $30. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or River Kitty at (812) 550-1553 for adoption details!
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FORTY BOWL GAMES AND COUNTING By Jim Redwine
Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine
www.jamesmredwine.com
FORTY BOWL GAMES AND COUNTING
Americans rushed to California in 1849 seeking gold. Most found what the little boy shot at. But now there is gold to be found by college football teams heading to California, and Florida, Texas, etc., etc., to play in one of the college bowl games. It is estimated that in excess of half a billion dollars will change hands between the first bowl game on December 16, 2017 (The Celebration Bowl played between Grambling and North Carolina A & T in Atlanta, Georgia) and the National Championship Bowl to be held January 08, 2018 in the same place.
My alma mater, Indiana University, will not be among the 80 colleges participating. We will, however, share in a portion of the bowl revenues that other Big 10 universities will rake in. Maybe we can use the money to help fund the one event I.U. students always get to play in, the Little 500 bike race. Okay, enough sour grapes. Let’s move along with the main topic which is the college football bowl season.
Less than forty years after the end of the Civil War (1902) the first college bowl game was held between the University of Michigan (representing the east) and Stanford University (representing the west). America’s Civil War wounds were still too raw to pit a northern team versus a southern one. The game was conceived as a fundraiser to help Pasadena, California defray the expenses of the Rose Parade that was always held to celebrate the New Year. Unfortunately, Michigan beat Stanford so badly that Stanford walked off the field and quit in the third quarter (49-0). This was so embarrassing the Rose Bowl game was not held again until 1916.
However, due to the financial success of games from 1916 up to the time of the Great Depression other communities jumped on the bowl bandwagon. Miami, Florida started the Orange Bowl in 1933, New Orleans added the Sugar Bowl in 1935 and Texas started the Sun Bowl in 1936 and the Cotton Bowl in 1937. A true gold rush was in full swing.
The 2018 Rose Bowl will be held New Year’s Day between The University of Oklahoma and the University of Georgia. Each school’s conference will be paid $40 million dollars and each of the two schools playing will get paid over $2 million as “compensation for expensesâ€. My guess is each university will use the money to snag five star recruits and build evermore state of the art practice facilities. I say we should not expect the money to be invested in each university’s academic needs. On the other hand, Peg and I have not seen fit to buy any tickets to watch the exciting lectures on physics at I.U. instead of the moribund football games!
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to:
VCSO Will Ring The Bells For The Salvation Army Red Kettle Campaign Today
Members of the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office will volunteer to raise money for the Salvation Army Red Kettle Campaign today.
Nearly 30 sheriff’s deputies, confinement officers and staff will man nine red kettle locations throughout the city and county on Saturday, December 16, 2017. Volunteering on their off time, Sheriff’s Office members have been helping the Salvation Army every December since 2007.
Contributions to Salvation Army kettles enable the organization to continue its year-round efforts to help the less fortunate.
Holcomb Public Schedule for December 18
Monday, December 18, 2017: 22nd Annual Governor’s Luncheon for Scouting
WHO:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Gov. Holcomb
First Lady Holcomb
WHAT:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Gov. Holcomb will give the keynote address.
WHEN:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â From noon to 1:30 p.m. with Gov. Holcomb remarks at 1 p.m., Monday, Dec. 18
WHERE:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â JW Marriott
10 S. West St.
Indianapolis, IN 46204
The Grand Ballroom
Austin Peay And Midway On The Docket This Weekend For UE Men
Aces Play At Home On Saturday and Sunday
A pair of home contests await the University of Evansville men’s basketball team welcomes Austin Peay and Midway to the Ford Center. UE faces the Governors on Saturday before taking on the Eagles on Sunday; both games begin at 3 p.m.
Dru Smith had a great week in leading UE to a pair of wins; the guard finished with 21 points per game, 4 rebounds and had 13 assists against just three turnovers. He had a career-high 25 points on Dec. 5 at Bowling Green; it marked Smith’s top game at UE, passing his 19 scored at Wichita State last season. Smith will miss up to four weeks with a stress fracture.
This weekend, the Aces play home games on consecutive days for the first time since playing three in a row in 2012 in the Coaches vs. Cancer event. That year, UE took on Buffalo, Yale and Western Illinois from Nov. 15-17. Prior to 2012, the last time playing that many home games in consecutive days came in 2006 when the team played Miami, Cleveland State and Buffalo.
A great senior season continued for Blake Simmons, who has averaged 15 points per game over the last three games. Simmons finished with 17 points against Oakland City before scoring 16 at BGSU and 12 versus Canisius. This current streak is just behind his top 3-game scoring output came in his freshman campaign, scoring 47 in three games. He is on pace for his top college season, averaging 11.1 PPG; his best season came in 2013-14 when he finished with 9.3 PPG. He has scored at least nine points in eight of the last nine games and is shooting 52.5% from outside, 6th in the MVC.
Over the course of the opening ten games of the year, the Purple Aces have connected on 148 out of 192 free throw attempts, 77.1%. The percentage ranks 25th in the country; Evansville’s opponents have hit 90 free throws in 143 attempts, 62.9%. UE has hit an average of 5.8 more free throws per game than the opposition.
Austin Peay heads north to Evansville with a 4-5 record after dropping a 64-57 game last time out at Illinois. Dayton Gumm leads the way for APSU with 12.8 points per game and has hit a team-high 11 triples. Terry Taylor checks in with 12.7 PPG while Averyl Ugba sits at 12.0. Taylor is the top rebounder on the squad, totaling 8.1 caroms per game through the Governors’ opening nine contests.
UE welcomes Midway College on Sunday. The Eagles are located in Midway, Ky., which is between Frankfort and Lexington. They are members of the NAIA and stand at 4-7 on the season. Midway faces Indiana University Kokomo on Saturday before heading to Evansville.