http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/jail-recent-booking-records.aspx
Republicans Pushing Hard To Unseat Donnelly
Republicans Pushing Hard To Unseat Donnelly
By Adrianna Pitrelli
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS — One of the most hotly contested Senate races in the nation is taking place here in the Hoosier state and no matter what happens in 2018, at least two current members of Congress will be unemployed.
“If Republicans want to keep their majority [in the Senate], they have to win,†said Nathan Gonzales, editor of Inside Elections. “Republicans in Washington want to defeat Sen. Donnelly, but it also is an example of the struggle going on within the Republican party.â€
U.S. Reps. Todd Rokita and Luke Messer are among more than a half dozen Republicans vying for U.S. Sen. Joe Donnelly’s seat. Whoever wins in May’s primary will go head-to-head with the incumbent next November.
As Republicans push to take the Senate seat, President Donald Trump isn’t helping the party succeed, Gonzales said.
“The Republican president is having Democratic senators over for bipartisan dinners and so he is handing the Democrats positive headlines about moderation which could help Donnelly win reelection,†Gonzales said.
Donnelly, seeking his second term, announced that he will travel to Indianapolis Wednesday with the president when Trump unveils more details about his tax cut proposal.
Because the race is seen as a toss-up by well-known organizations that analyze campaigns and elections like Cook Political Report, Larry J. Sabato’s Crystal Ball and Inside Elections, the GOP candidates have hit the campaign ground running eight months prior to the primary.
“They’re already trying to get donors and starting to work on voters,†said Laura Merrifield Wilson, political science professor at the University of Indianapolis. “It is going to be a very interesting race, both statewide and nationally.â€
U.S. Rep. Todd Rokita is one of the candidates for Indiana’s 2018 Senate race. He is running on rebuilding the military, securing the borders and reforming the tax code.
Photo by Makenna Mays, TheStatehouseFile.com
With a campaign that could span longer than a year comes a need for money and the candidates are already bringing in the funds. Donnelly leads the group with nearly $3.7 million on hand, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, but has been saving since 2013 after being elected to a six year-term. Rokita has around $2.4 million and Messer is trailing behind with a little more than $2 million.
“Both [Republican] candidates really have to look at financing,†Wilson said. “You want to have money early on to get an exponential popularity factor. Our primary is late but if you don’t have the money and don’t do well in May, then you aren’t moving on.â€
Money and success don’t have a direct correlation, Gonzales said, but it’s an essential part of the campaign process, especially in a race of this caliber.
“You can be the best candidate in the world but if you don’t have money to introduce yourself to voters or to tell voters why you’re running, you have no way to get to them,†he said. “You need money to communicate your message.â€
Rokita and Messer are the better-known names among the Republican challengers, but Donnelly has had six years of crisscrossing the state to meet and listen to voters.
Rokita previously served two terms as Indiana’s secretary of state from 2002 to 2010 before being elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. Messer has been in and out of politics and has continuously served in the House of Representatives since 2013.
Most of Rokita’s funds come from large individual contributions while most of Messer’s comes from political action committee funds. But the focus is more on the small contributions that are expected to increase in early 2018.
“People want to support a winner,†Wilson said. “When people see someone surge ahead early on, they’ll want to start donating to that candidate and they’ll start to pick up momentum.â€
So far, Messer leads in the support of other Republicans, including U.S. Rep. Susan Brooks of Carmel, but it is too soon to say who will be out front in terms of money raised.
While candidates aren’t seeing a lot of small donations yet, they’re already working to lock down donors. For small donations less than $200, Messer has received $8,447 and Rokita has raised nearly double that with $16,788.
Even though there isn’t a proven correlation between money raised and who wins, more small donations imply a candidate has more supporters. Donnelly has raised $412,949 from small individual contributions.
Indiana leans right, but it has long been a state that has voted for some Democrats for state and nationwide positions. In 2008, Hoosiers elected former President Barack Obama, but in 2012, when Donnelly won, Hoosiers voted for Republican Mitt Romney and elected Gov. Mike Pence.
Last November, Trump beat Democratic nominee-Hillary Clinton by nearly 20 percentage points and remains popular with many Hoosiers. It led The Hill, a political journalism news site, to peg Donnelly “among the most vulnerable Senate Democrats†running in 2018.
But Donnelly is a moderate and one of three Democrats nationwide who voted to confirm conservative Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.
Republicans are anxious to regain the seat after a tough loss in 2012 when Donnelly beat Richard Mourdock, who had unseated the incumbent Republican, Richard Lugar, in the primary.
“Donnelly has positioned himself very well as a blue senator in a red state,†Wilson said. “The 2018 congressional midterm is a referendum for the Trump administration.â€
Meanwhile, the two leading Republican challengers are working to differentiate themselves from each other and show voters he is best positioned to unseat Donnelly.
“Trump swept the state and both candidates want to stay loyal to Trump’s constituents,†Wilson said. “They’re on a constant battle to outdo each other for primaries and be able to bring themselves to the top.â€
Messer is running to fix what he calls a broken U.S. Senate.
“President Trump is working to get his agenda passed and deliver for the American people, and the Senate is blocking almost every play,†Messer said. “It’s not ok to promise for seven years to repeal Obamacare, fail and walk away. The Senate was one vote short to repeal Obamacare — I would have been that vote.â€
Meanwhile, Rokita is running on rebuilding the military, securing the borders and reforming the tax code.
At a rally last week led by Vice President Mike Pence to support tax reform, Rokita blasted Donnelly.
“We have a portfolio of bad votes from Joe Donnelly,†Rokita said. “He doesn’t represent Hoosiers on the whole and all that is going to come out in this campaign.â€
Messer said he prefers to stay out of the drama of politics. But he recently took a stab at Donnelly via Twitter by writing, “Typical @SenDonnelly. Says one thing in Indiana and does another thing in Washington,†referring to a Donnelly quote to USA TODAY that read, “I think that Trump supporters were originally Joe Donnelly supporters and still are.â€
U.S. Sen. Joe Donnelly is in the midst of one of the hotly contested Senate races in 2018. Photo by Makenna Mays, TheStatehouseFile.com
With eight months until the primary election and more than a year until the general election, politicos across the board said the race is bound to get messier.
“Campaigning is a time to define yourself and define your opponent,†Gonzales said. “If you’re not out early and often doing those things, your opponent is going to do it for you.â€
While the GOP rivals are campaigning against each other to decipher who will represent the Republicans in November, Donnelly’s focus is on Hoosiers.
“My focus is just on trying to do the job well,†Donnelly said.
Adrianna Pitrelli is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Channel 44News Team Wins IBA Award
Channel 44News Team Wins IBA Award
Their story was called “Fallen Through The Cracks†and it was about overcrowded foster care in Indiana.
A big congratulations to both of them.
For the full story, visit Foster Families in Indiana in High Demand – Fallen Through The Cracks.
University Of Southern Indiana Chamber Choir Will Present The 48th Annual Madrigal Feaste
The University of Southern Indiana Chamber Choir will present the 48th annual Madrigal Feaste from Thursday, November 30 through Sunday, December 3, in Carter Hall located in University Center West on the USI campus.
First performed in 1969 and USI’s oldest musical tradition, the Madrigal Feaste is a festive dinner and concert set in Renaissance Ireland. Attendees witness the reenactment of a royal feast, with processionals and holiday music accompanying each item on the menu as performers and guests welcome the holiday season.
The USI Chamber Choir will entertain with selections of old English Madrigals, Irish traditional folk songs and carols, as well as stirring choral selections for the holiday season from a wide variety of European repertory. Dinner selections will include green tossed salad, hot wassail, soup of beef and barley, roasted chicken, holiday roasted potatoes, fresh steamed vegetables, and bread pudding with rum sauce.
Tickets are $28 for USI students and seniors (60+) and $34 for adults. Doors open at 7 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and 12:30 p.m. for the Sunday matinee. To purchase tickets, visit USI.edu/madrigals or call at 812-461-5237.
For more information, contact Dan Craig, associate professor of music, at 812-464-1736.
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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COA Modifies Delinquent Adjudication To Lesser Offense
Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
A teenage boy who threw a rock through a woman’s car window will retain his adjudication as a delinquent child, but the majority of the Indiana Court of Appeals ordered Friday that the evidence requires his adjudication to be based on a lesser offense.
In T.H. v. State of Indiana, 49A02-1703-JV-518, T.H.’s mother saw her son throw a brick through a window of Maria Castro’s car in July 2016 and called the police, resulting in her son being arrested and taken to a juvenile detention center. The state then filed a delinquency petition against T.H., alleging he had committed what would be Class A misdemeanor criminal mischief if committed by an adult, by causing than $750 in damages to Castro’s car.
During a fact-finding hearing, Castro testified that a dealership had replaced the glass on her window, but she did not know where the repairs had taken place or how much they cost. The Marion Superior Court ultimately adjudicated T.H. as a delinquent for the Class A misdemeanor offense that caused more than $750 in damages.
In a Friday appellate opinion, the Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed T.H.’s adjudication, but a majority of the panel reversed the finding that he had committed more than $750 in damages.
Specifically, Judge Melissa May, writing for the majority joined by Judge Michael Barnes, noted the estimate Castro submitted to the prosecutor – which showed roughly $2,500 in damages – was dated five months before T.H.’s act and incorrectly listed the dealership’s name and the vehicle identification number, among other inconsistencies. T.H.’s counsel addressed these inconsistencies during his cross-examination of Castro, May said.
“The Exhibit here was rife with error, at best, and likely fraudulent,†May wrote. “… It simply was not credible evidence of Castro’s alleged damages. As a result, we hold that the State failed to prove the $750 in damages required to support a true finding of criminal mischief as a Class A misdemeanor if committed by an adult.â€
Instead, the majority remanded the case for the court to modify its records to show T.H. has been adjudicated for committing what would be Class B misdemeanor criminal mischief. But in a dissenting opinion, Judge Cale Bradford wrote that in its role as the trier-of-fact, the juvenile court chose whether to believe the evidence and decided the state met its burden of proving the existence of more than $750 in damages.
“When the sole focus is on the amount and quality of the estimate, we are distracted from our appellate review of the ultimate question, which is whether the evidence is sufficient to show damages of at least $750,†Bradford wrote. “Given the documentary evidence coupled with Castro’s testimony, I would conclude that the evidence is easily sufficient to sustain the juvenile court’s adjudication.â€
May pointed to the Indiana Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Love v. State, 73 N.E. 3d 693, 699-700 (Ind. 2017), in which the court wrote that when “video evidence indisputably contradicts the trial court’s findings, relying on such evidence and reversing the trial court’s findings do not constitute reweighing.â€
That ruling provided a “narrow failsafe†for cases with video evidence, May said, and “(l)ike video evidence, documents submitted as exhibits are capable of being reviewed de novo by an appellate court.†But in a footnote to his dissent, Bradford said he would not expand the holding in Love to apply to the instant case.
HAIL,THE QUEEN OF COLLUSION By Michael Reagan
Making Sense by Michael Reagan
Excuse me, but didn’t I write this column already?
Didn’t I point out a while ago that when it comes to asking the Russians to mess with our presidential elections the real pros of collusion have always been the Democrats?
Now I remember.
In a column for Newsmax late last year I pointed out several well-documented instances in 1979, 1980 and 1984 where prominent Democrats connived with Moscow to advance their own presidential chances or damage my father’s.
Jimmy Carter, Ted Kennedy and Tip O’Neill each contacted the Soviets and asked them to do things that would undermine American foreign policy and keep my father from being elected or re-elected.
It didn’t work, but it wasn’t for the Democrats’ lack of trying.
Last May on CNN I tried to remind Don Lemon of the Democrats’ shameful record of colluding with the despots of Moscow, but he was too busy joining in the MSM’s hysterical gang bang of Donald Trump to discuss such ancient history.
Lemon also didn’t want to hear it from me that I thought President Trump did not collude with the Russians, but I told him so – or tried to.
Now it turns out that Hillary and the Democratic National Committee were the ones who were rolling around in a dirty bed with the Russians.
It apparently was her incompetent billion-dollar election campaign and the DNC that hired the political consulting firm that in turn commissioned a salacious but totally fake anti-Trump dossier that included information supplied by Russian intelligence sources.
And before that it was then-Secretary of State Hillary, her partner-in-crime Bill and their phony Clinton Foundation that were handsomely rewarded by Putin’s friends for smoothing Russia’s purchase of 20 percent of America’s uranium supply.
The amazing events of this week have outed Hillary as the real colluder in chief.
When the former FBI informant who knows the details of the Uranium One deal shares his files with a few congressional committees, Hillary, Bill and the DNC should be in big trouble.
The DNC’s current leadership’s initial defense was pure chickenhearted BS – “It wasn’t us who paid for that fake Russian dirt on Trump. It was those bad guys who were there before us.â€
Hillary and Bill will never confess to any wrongdoing, of course. They’ll tell their usual lies and try to wriggle off the hook.
And the liberal media will do all they can to excuse their heroes’ latest sins and downplay the obvious corruption of their foundation’s cynical pay-for-play racket.
At CNN and elsewhere they’ve already begun to argue that Trump and Clinton and the Democrats and the Republicans are all equally guilty of desecrating our election process.
But this week looks like the opening episode of a long-running TV series called “UraniumGate,†starring Hillary and Bill as the co-villains.
It’s no surprise to anyone who’s lived through the last 30 years that it’s the Clintons who were the real Russian colluders.
They’re proving once again why they deserve to be the poster politicians for what’s wrong with politics in Washington.
People like them – and their apologists – are one of the main reasons Americans elected a political outsider like Donald Trump.
For decades the Clintons have been able to escape punishment for their many political and ethical crimes, but this time maybe they won’t be so lucky.
U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions Plans Monday Visit To Indianapolis At Invitation Of AG Curtis Hill
U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions plans to visit Indianapolis on Monday, Nov. 6, at the invitation of Attorney General Curtis Hill. Gen. Sessions intends to join Gen. Hill in meeting with members of the Indianapolis Ten Point Coalition (ITPC), a proven model for reducing urban youth gun violence in neighborhoods. In Indiana, the Office of Attorney General has partnered with the ITPC in efforts to spread the model to communities statewide.
Details for media are as follows:
Time: Media should arrive between 1 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 6.
Location: Barnes United Methodist Church, 900 West 30th St., Indianapolis.
Security measures: All gear must be staged for a security sweep no later than 1:30 p.m. Media will not have access to gear again until approximately 2:15 p.m.
Aces Pregame Party to be held on November 16
Coach Simmons and Marcus Wilson will speak at event
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – In the spirit of the Roberts Stadium Hospitality Room, the University of Evansville athletics department is proud to introduce the Aces DoubleTree Pregame Party on November 16, prior to the home contest against Southeast Missouri State.
Taking place from 4:30 p.m. through 7:00 p.m., the party will feature a pair of great speakers representing the Purple Aces. Head coach Marty Simmons kicks it off with an appearance at 5:15 p.m. At 6:15 p.m., 1999 Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year and All-Centennial Team member Marcus Wilson will be on hand. The party will take place in the DoubleTree ballroom inside the hotel.
A full package, including entry to the party, is available for just $20 per person. The admission price covers the party, a full meal (menu is linked above), water/soda/lemonade/tea and parking in the DoubleTree parking garage. A cash bar will also be on hand. Your parking space at the garage is good through the completion of the game. The garage is connected to the DoubleTree, which is adjacent to the Ford Center via a walkway. When you arrive at the event, just bring your parking ticket to the party for it to be validated. You will be able to park, attend the event and take the skywalk to the Ford Center for the game without ever going outside!
If you would like to attend, please fill out the form that is linked above. This will help the chef to prepare enough food for those in attendance. Walk-ups are also welcome. Payment for the party will be made to DoubleTree upon your arrival on the 16th.
Is there a question or topic that you would like to have Marcus Wilson discuss at the party? We will be taking questions via social media that we will give to him. Those can be submitted at any time on Twitter (@UEAthletics) or Facebook (University of Evansville Athletic Department).