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NEW TAX BILL

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St. Vincent Evansville Birth Announcements for week of December 5, 2017

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Ashlee Gilbert and Jared Wagner, Evansville, daughter, Sophia Elizabeth, Nov. 22

Catherine and Zachary Zalucki, Evansville, son, Ryan JC Wayne, Nov. 27

Mallory and Joseph Kiesler, Evansville, son, Edward Joseph, Nov. 27

Rahni Taylor and Jermaine Johnson, Evansville, son, Jerijah Asad Hershel Luke, Nov. 27

Chelsea Stuteville and Adam Whipkey, Evansville, son, Liam James, Nov. 27

Holly Gentry and David Moseley, Tell City, IN, son, Westyn Owen Othmar, Nov. 27

Alyssa and Brandon Slaton, Evansville, daughter, Hazel Jolene, Nov. 28

Heather and Corey Hendon, Evansville, daughter, Ansley Reese, Nov. 28

Kimberly or Garren Hill, Princeton, IN, daughter, Mia Rose, Nov. 28

Ashley Hopf and DJ Hall, Poseyville, IN, son, Hayden Mitchell, Nov. 28

Hailee and Damiem Grice, Evansville, son, Konnor McCoy, Nov. 29

Brittany and Christopher Butler, Henderson, KY, son, Caspian Grey, Nov. 29

Meagan and Tanner Telligman, Bruceville, IN, daughter, Lillian Abigail Mae, Nov. 29

Mi’Randa Singh, Evansville, daughter, Ka’Lieyha Mo’Niek, Nov. 29

Bailey and Joseph Stewart, Mount Vernon, IN, son, Maddux Wayne, Nov. 30

Allison and Jared Stunkel, Owensville, IN, son, Jensen James, Nov. 30

Whitney and Travis Taylor, Henderson, KY, son, Carson Daniel, Nov. 30

Mia Mimms and Christian Voorhess Russ, Evansville, daughter, Aria Jane, Nov. 30

Kaylee Ricketts, Evansville, daughter, Makayla Ann Marie, Dec. 1

Kara and Tucker Evans, Rockport, IN, son, Jasper Avery, Dec. 1

Sarah Benton and Christopher Cunningham, Evansville, daughter, Beckett Rose, Dec. 1

Tara and James Holder, Evansville, son, Wyatt James, Dec. 2

Desiree and Danny Scales, Evansville, son, Rogan Ryne, Dec. 2

Jessica Trinh and Codi Meyer, Evansville, son, Jamison Joe Van, Dec. 2

Divided Supreme Court throws out juvenile’s LWOP sentence

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

In a 3-2 decision Tuesday, the Indiana Supreme Court reduced a life without parole sentence for an offender convicted of murder at 17, finding LWOP sentences should be reserved for the most “heinous” juvenile offenders. The dissenting justices, however, found the nature of the crime in question warranted a life sentence.

While hanging out with friends in November 2015, 17-year-old Carltez Taylor, who had recently been released from a juvenile boot camp, loaded a magazine into a gun his friend had brought with him and stuck the gun in his waistband. Later in the evening, one of Taylor’s friends, D.G., began texting her boyfriend, J.W., which angered Taylor.

Taylor and the other teenage boys present then began discussing a plan to fight J.W. They told D.G. to convince J.W. to come over. J.W. agreed to meet D.G. on a nearby street corner, where she made him wait under the guise of waiting for her sister to arrive. But while J.W. and his nephew, T.S., were standing on the corner, Taylor emerged and opened fire with his friend’s gun, striking J.W. in the back and killing him.

Both D.G. and T.S. recognized Taylor as the shooter. After he fled the scene, the 17-year-old returned to D.G.’s house and threatened to kill her if she told anyone what she had witnessed. Taylor and the other boys then hid the gun, magazine and hoodie Taylor had been wearing, but when T.S.’s family told police that Taylor was the shooter, D.G. led detectives to the hidden evidence.

Taylor eventually turned himself in and was charged with murder, attempted murder and conspiracy to commit murder. Two days before trial, the state amended the conspiracy count to reflect that another teen had supplied the gun, and Taylor objected on timeliness grounds. The court overruled the objection, but did agree to bar a state’s witness from referring to Taylor by his nickname, “Looney the Shooter.”

However, the state and a witness did refer to Taylor by his nickname, though his counsel did not object.

A jury eventually found Taylor guilty of the murder and conspiracy charges and recommended a sentence of life without parole. The Vanderburgh Circuit Court agreed, making Taylor only the fifth juvenile in Indiana history to receive an LWOP sentence.

Taylor challenged his convictions and sentence on the basis of his age during oral arguments before the Indiana Supreme Court in June, and the divided court ultimately revised his sentence to an aggregate 80 years in a Tuesday opinion.

Chief Justice Loretta Rush, writing for the majority, first said that while the use of the name “Looney the Shooter” was improper, it did not amount to fundamental error considering the other “strong” evidence against Taylor. Rush further concluded the state’s charging amendment made two days before trial was formal, rather than substantive, because it did not prejudice Taylor’s substantial rights. The amendment also did not prejudice his defense that challenged the identity of the shooter, so it was not untimely, she said.

The chief justice wrote there was “ample circumstantial evidence” to imply a conspiracy to murder J.W., including Taylor’s discussions with the other teenage boys about fighting J.W., D.G.’s agreement to convince J.W. to come over and wait for her “sister,” and the teens’ efforts to hide the evidence after the shooting. The court also left Taylor’s 35-year concurrent sentence on the conspiracy charge intact.

However, the majority of justices ultimately chose to lessen Taylor’s murder sentence to 80 years, considering the immaturity that accompanied Taylor’s age and the inability he would have to improve his character if he never had the opportunity to get out of prison. Additionally, compared to the “drawn out” nature of the murder in Conley v. State, 972 N.E.2d 864, 880 (Ind. 2012) — the only juvenile LWOP case the court has upheld — J.W.’s death was “nearly instantaneous.”

“Our collective judgment is that Taylor’s character and the nature of his offense — grievous as it was — do not warrant making him Indiana’s fifth juvenile sentenced to a guaranteed death in prison,” Rush wrote.

The court’s decision was unanimous except on the central issue of whether the LWOP sentence should be upheld. Justice Geoffrey Slaughter, writing in a dissenting and concurring opinion joined by Justice Mark Massa, said Taylor’s actions reflected a disregard for human life, and his past criminal history did not support his argument for a more lenient sentence on the grounds of his character.

“…I disagree that Conley set a floor below which any juvenile whose offense is thought to be any less monstrous will obtain 7(B) relief,” Slaughter wrote. “That is the trend and, I fear, the implication of today’s decision. As the Court recognizes, the point of rule 7(B) is to ‘leaven outliers,’ to not achieve some perceived correct sentence, whatever that means.”

Governor Eric Holcomb Directs Flags To Be Flown at Half-Staff

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INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Eric J. Holcomb is directing flags across the state to be flown at half-staff for Pearl Harbor Day.

Flags should be flown at half-staff from sunrise to sunset on Thursday, December 7, 2017.

Gov. Holcomb also asks businesses and residents to lower their flags to half-staff on Thursday.

Adopt A Pet

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This is Tommy. Female Tommy, that is. She’s a 5-month-old gray & white kitten. Her adoption fee is $50 and includes her spay, microchip, first vaccines & deworming, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for details!

Indiana Prosecutors Press Conference: The Truth About Marijuana

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 The Truth About Marijuana, during a press conference, Wednesday, December 6 at 1:30 p.m. at the Indianapolis Sheraton at Keystone Crossing, 8787 Keystone Crossing, Plaza Ballroom D & E.

Sponsored by the Association of Indiana Prosecuting Attorneys, Inc., the press conference will feature Association representatives, Luke Niforatos of Smart Approaches to Marijuana (SAM), Mike Ripley of the Indiana Chamber of Commerce and Boone County Sheriff Mike Nielsen, all describing positions against legalization of marijuana in any form, for any purpose.

Following the press conference will be an educational summit continuing until about 4 p.m.  The summit will feature presentations by Indiana Attorney General Curtis T. Hill, Jr. (via video), SAM’s Niforatos, Indianapolis Internist Dr. Palmer MacKie, the Indiana Chamber’s Ripley, Sheriff Nielsen and Ripley County Prosecuting Attorney Richard Hertel, president of the Association of Indiana Prosecuting Attorneys. The media is invited to attend this event as well.

AG Curtis Hill seeks U.S. Supreme Court ruling against California’s restrictive farming regulations

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            Actions aimed at protecting Indiana farmers from aggressive over-regulation

Attorney General Curtis Hill announced today his office has joined a 12-state effort to challenge in the U.S. Supreme Court attempts by California to impose agricultural regulations on Indiana and other states.

The lawsuit opposes a California law requiring egg producers in all other states to comply with California’s farming regulations regarding housing of poultry in order to sell eggs in that state. The suit claims that California’s regulations violate both a federal law prohibiting states from imposing their own standards on eggs produced in other states and the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution, which gives Congress exclusive authority to regulate commerce among and between states.

In 2016, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that an earlier group of plaintiff states lacked standing to pursue their claims in this regard. Today’s filing in the U.S. Supreme Court, however, answers this assertion by providing a careful economic analysis that establishes the impact of these burdensome regulations.

“This case involves a concept known as horizontal federalism,” Attorney General Hill said. “Under the Constitution, states must respect one another’s sovereign prerogatives.”

Especially worth noting, he added, is that the California law has nothing to do with the quality of the products sold to consumers.

“Obviously, every state has the right to regulate products based on such factors as consumer health and safety,” Attorney General Hill said. “It’s another thing altogether for one state to sit in judgment of other states’ manufacturing and production processes – and to erect barriers to products from other states based upon that judgment.”

In the case against California, Indiana joins lead plaintiff Missouri along with Alabama, Arkansas, Iowa, Louisiana, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Utah and Wisconsin.

States’ legal complaints against other states must be filed directly in the U.S. Supreme Court, as Congress has provided that “[t]he Supreme Court shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction of all controversies between two or more States.” 28 U.S.C. § 1251(a).

Hannah Noe named MVC Newcomer of the Week

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Following a pair of impressive scoring performances on the road, University of Evansville women’s basketball graduate guard Hannah Noe has been named Missouri Valley Conference Newcomer of the Week, it was announced in a release by the conference office on Monday.

The Dexter, Missouri native fueled a 12-6 run with back-to-back-to-back three-pointers as she tallied 13 points on 4-9 shooting from beyond the arc in the Aces’ loss at WKU. On Saturday, Noe recorded the second-best scoring outing of her career with 29 points, including six triples, in Evansville’s 82-73 loss at Austin Peay.

Noe currently leads the MVC in scoring and sits 71st nationally averaging 18.2 points per game, while also topping The Valley in three-pointers made per game with 3.7 per contest, the 11th-best average in the nation.

The honor is the second of the season for Noe, who captured conference player and newcomer of the week recognition on November 13 for her 33-point performance in an 89-81 victory over Murray State.

The Aces wrap-up a three-game road trip on Tuesday when they face 20th-ranked Kentucky at 6 p.m. (CT) on the road in Lexington, Kentucky.

Local Author to Read to Fairlawn Students

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Local Author to Read to Fairlawn Students
Wednesday, December 6
1:10 p.m.
Fairlawn Elementary School, 2021 S. Alvord Blvd.
To help get students in the holiday mood, and to allow them to personally meet a real-life author, local author Angela Karcher will visit Fairlawn Elementary School tomorrow to personally read her newest book, Santa’s Gift, to kindergarten students. The book is about the large Santa statue that has recently been refurnished and relocated on Highway 41.